Literature DB >> 17477738

Variation of laser-induced retinal injury thresholds with retinal irradiated area: 0.1-s duration, 514-nm exposures.

David J Lund1, Peter Edsall, Bruce E Stuck, Karl Schulmeister.   

Abstract

The retinal injury threshold dose for laser exposure varies as a function of the irradiated area on the retina. Zuclich reported thresholds for laser-induced retinal injury from 532 nm, nanosecond-duration laser exposures that varied as the square of the diameter of the irradiated area on the retina. We report data for 0.1-s-duration retinal exposures to 514-nm, argon laser irradiation. Thresholds for macular injury at 24 h are 1.05, 1.40, 1.77, 3.58, 8.60, and 18.6 mJ for retinal exposures at irradiance diameters of 20, 69, 136, 281, 562, and 1081 microm, respectively. These thresholds vary as the diameter of the irradiated retinal area. The relationship between the retinal injury threshold and retinal irradiance diameter is a function of the exposure duration. The 0.1-s-duration data of this experiment and the nanosecond-duration data of Zuclich show that the ED(50) (50% effective dose) for exposure to a highly collimated beam does not decrease relative to the value obtained for a retinal irradiance diameter of 100 microm. These results can form the basis to improve current laser safety guidelines in the nanosecond-duration regime. These results are relevant for ophthalmic devices incorporating both wavefront correction and retinal exposure to a collimated laser.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17477738     DOI: 10.1117/1.2714810

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomed Opt        ISSN: 1083-3668            Impact factor:   3.170


  4 in total

1.  Retinal damage thresholds from 100-millisecond laser radiation exposure at 1319 nm: a comparative study for rabbits with different ocular axial lengths.

Authors:  Luguang Jiao; Jiarui Wang; Jinggeng Yang; Yan Fan; Zaifu Yang
Journal:  Biomed Opt Express       Date:  2019-03-18       Impact factor: 3.732

2.  Biomedical optics applications of advanced lasers and nonlinear optics.

Authors:  Christopher B Marble; Vladislav V Yakovlev
Journal:  J Biomed Opt       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 3.170

3.  High-resolution in vivo imaging of regimes of laser damage to the primate retina.

Authors:  Ginger M Pocock; Jeffrey W Oliver; Charles S Specht; J Scot Estep; Gary D Noojin; Kurt Schuster; Benjamin A Rockwell
Journal:  J Ophthalmol       Date:  2014-05-07       Impact factor: 1.909

4.  Non-Therapeutic Laser Retinal Injury.

Authors:  Patrick W Commiskey; Curtis J Heisel; Yannis M Paulus
Journal:  Int J Ophthalmic Res       Date:  2019-11-26
  4 in total

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