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| United States Patent | 4122853 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4122853.html |
| Inventor(s) | Smith; Michael R. (Thousand Oaks, CA) |
| Abstract | An apparatus and method for cauterizing biological tissue while providing
isolation from surrounding absorbing tissue and fluid media. The device is
comprised of a probe having a special window through which an infrared
laser beam is directed to cauterize the biological tissue. The device is
comprised of an infrared laser beam generator, a control circuit for
controlling the intensity and duration of the laser beam and an
articulated arm for directing the laser beam to the probe. The probe is
comprised of a hollow, laser light guide tube having an infrared
transparent window in its tip which permits the tip to be brought into
contact with biological tissue such as vascular tissue to be cauterized
while excluding the surrounding absorbing tissue from the effects of the
beam. The probe may also include an adjacent endoscopic viewing tube and
accessory tube to provide fluid, suction and optical illumination at the
vicinity of the window. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4122853 |
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Infrared laser photocautery device |
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| Publication Date |
October 31, 1978 |
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| Filing Date |
March 14, 1977 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to laser beam technology used in surgical
procedures, and more particularly relates to the use of an infrared laser
beam for delivery of energy to a localized area within an absorptive
medium.
The use of laser beams as a tool for performing various surgical
procedures, such as cutting and cauterizing various types of biological
tissues, is well known in the art. The cutting action is provided by an
intense local heating of the tissue due to absorption by the tissue of the
laser energy in the focused laser spot. Such devices have been used
previously for various surgical procedures such as dermatological port
wine birthmark removal, laryngological and gynecological polyp excision
and opthalmic retinal photocoagulation. One such prior art device utilizes
a carbon dioxide infrared laser beam which is movably positioned by a
directional mirror and focused by a lens through an intervening air
interface to concentrate the laser energy and the tissue surface of a
remote treatment site.
All of the prior art utilizing carbon dioxide infrared laser beam tissue
treatment has been limited to the treatment of surface tissues which can
be approached through an adjacent air interface. The use of this
particular range of laser wave lengths for the treatment of biological
tissue situated within an intervening or surrounding absorbing medium has
been precluded in the prior art because the CO.sub.2 laser radiation is
completely absorbed by the outer layers of fluid or tissue and the beam
cannot penetrate into the underlying layers of tissue without vaporizing
or damaging the outer layers. In many instances (e.g. gastric surgery,
intraocular surgery, and neurosurgery) it is desirable to operate within
an internal region and to localize placement of the laser energy within a
highly absorptive medium without damaging the intervening and surrounding
tissue. For example, if retinal vascular tissue were to be cauterized
intraocularly be means of an infrared laser beam, or similarly if a
bleeding gastric ulcer were to be cauterized in situ while surrounded by
normal gastric fluids, these sites would lie within an absorptive medium.
Previous devices utilizing this type of infrared laser beam could not be
used to selectively treat tissue which was immersed within a surrounding
absorptive medium, without being absorbed by the intervening tissue.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The purpose of the present invention is to provide an infrared laser beam,
such as a carbon dioxide laser for use in photocoagulation or localized
surgical procedures within an absorptive medium.
The present invention provides a device for receiving an infrared laser
beam, for manipulating, focusing and delivering the focused laser energy
to a predetermined localized area within an absorptive medium while
isolating the surrounding medium from damage by absorption of the laser
energy.
The invention is particularly useful for performing infrared surgery of
tissue which is immersed and surrounded by other water-bearing material,
or absorptive material, such as the vitreous medium of the eye.
The system is comprised of a CO.sub.2 laser beam generator and a control
system for controlling the intensity and duration of the beam. The laser
beam is directed in a flexible manner from the laser to a probe by means
of an articulated arm light guide for treatment of a localized area. The
probe is comprised of a highly polished laser light guide tube by which
the laser energy can be selectively delivered to a particular area while
isolating the surrounding absorptive medium from damage by the laser
energy. The probe can be passed through a water-bearing biological tissue
and brought directly into contact with the area to be treated. The laser
energy emerges through the outer surface of a tiny transparent window in
the tip of the probe. Thus, the device can be effectively used to
cauterize vascular tissues such as those found in the eye or selectively
treat other tissue immersed within a surrounding absorptive medium.
It is one object of the present invention to provide an infrared laser beam
for use in treating localized areas within an absorptive medium.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an infrared laser
beam surgical tube which can be used for photocauterizing intraocular
vascular tissue.
Other objects, advantages and novel features of the invention will become
apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when
considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like
reference numbers identify like parts throughout.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a semi-schematic drawing of the overall laser photocautery system
of the invention.
FIG. 2 is a sectional view of a probe for use with the photocautery system
of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 illustrates the use of the photocautery system for cauterizing
vascular tissue within the eye.
FIG. 4 illustrates another embodiment of a probe for use in the
photocautery system of FIG. 1.
FIG. 5 is a sectional view of an alternate embodiment of the probe for
performing intraocular vitrectomies.
FIG. 6 is an end view of the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 5.
FIG. 7 is a partial section view of the vitrectomy probe taken at 7--7 of
FIG. 6.
FIG. 8 is a partial section of the probe tip.
FIG. 9 is a sectional view taken at 9--9 of FIG. 8.
FIG. 10 is an enlarged partial section of the immediate area of the tip.
FIG. 11 is an enlarged perspective view of the tip end illustrating the
relationship of the components.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to FIG. 1, there is shown a laser photocautery system which is
comprised of a CO.sub.2 laser beam generator 10 for delivering a
collimated infrared laser beam, a rotary shutter 12 which is controlled by
control system 14 operated by a foot pedal switch 16. The control system
14 determines the intensity and duration of the laser beam energy on the
area being treated. The rotary shutter 12 normally blocks the laser beam
from the generator 10 and diverts it to a power meter 18, prior to
exposure for treatment.
When the shutter 12 is open, the beam is deflected by a mirror 20 into the
near end of an articulated arm 22. The mirror 20 provides alignment of the
infrared laser beam with the access of the first segment of articulated
arm 22. Rotatable mirror joints 21, 24 and 26 on the successive
articulated arm segments provide 6.degree. of freedom of motion to movably
control the position of the laser beam as it emerges from the output of
the articulated arm while maintaining angular alignment with respect to
the optical axis. The beam is flexibly delivered through the articulated
arm to a probe 30 for treatment of a localized area. In this case
treatment of the eye is being illustrated, but the device could be used
for treatment of any region within an intervening absorptive medium.
One embodiment probe 32 is illustrated in FIG. 2. In this probe a laser
light guide tube 34 is attached to a probe body 36 which contains a
beam-contracting telescope comprised of lenses 38 and 39. The laser light
guide tube 34 is a highly polished metallic tube whose inside surface
reflects the infrared laser radiation. Approximately 90% of a CO.sub.2
laser beam radiation can be transmitted through a one millimeter inside
diameter tube 90 millimeters long.
In order to bring the laser beam and the laser light guide tube directly to
the site to be treated, a window 40 is provided in the tip of the tube.
This prevents any intervening water-bearing biological tissue from
entering the laser light guide tube 34 and allows the tip 41 of the laser
light guide tube to make direct contact with the area to be treated.
In order to illuminate the area being treated for external microscopic
viewing, an annular light conduit 44 comprised of a fiber optic bundle is
mounted adjacent with the laser light guide tube. The annular gap 45
provides a passageway for irrigation during treatment. During an operative
procedure a source 46 illuminates the treatment area by directing the
light into the light conduit by means of light coupling connector 48. To
irrigate the area being treated with saline solution, a tube 50 would
connect and provide a flow of a fluid through passageway 45 to the
vicinity of the tip of the probe 32.
An alternative construction for the probe is illustrated in FIG. 4. This
embodiment has all the features of the previous embodiment, except that it
incorporates an endoscope for direct viewing of the area being treated. In
this embodiment a case 51 encloses an endoscopic viewing device 52, along
with a laser light guide tube 54 and provides a passageway 56 for
irrigating the area being treated as before. The endoscope has a
microscope eye piece 58 for viewing the area being treated and includes a
fiber optic coupler 60 to provide illumination for viewing through the
endoscope. In this case the laser beam is directed through a probe body 62
having the beam contracting telescope composed of lenses 38 and 39
directing the beam into the laser light guide tube 54 by reflection from a
mirror 64. Tube 66 connects a fluid to passageway 56 for irrigating the
treated area as before.
The end of the laser light guide tube 54 has a window 70 as before to
enable access to the area being treated with the infrared laser beam while
preventing absorption of the laser energy in the intervening tissue. In
this embodiment the window has a curved inner surface for imparting
optical power to the beam, i.e., the beam can be brought to a focused spot
or line at the outer surface of the window due to the lensing effect of
the curved inner surface of the window.
The use of the device in photocoagulation or cauterization of vascular
tissue in the eye to prevent hemorrhaging is illustrated in FIG. 3. To
cauterize a blood vessel in the posterior chamber of the eye, an incision
is made in the pars plana region and a temporary cannula or collar 72
inserted to permit passage of the probe 30 into the vitreous chamber of
the eye. The probe tip 41 is then inserted into the eye, passing through
the vitreous humour 74 until the tip of the probe 30 contacts the vascular
tissue to be cauterized. The surgeon then operates the foot pedal 16 (FIG
1) which exposes the vascular tissue to a predetermined intensity of the
beam for a predetermined length of time.
The collimated infrared laser beam enters the large end 36 of the
photocautery probe body and is reduced in diameter by the beam-contracting
telescope. The beam is recollimated after passing through second lens 39
and enters on axis into the hollow laser light guide tube 34. The diameter
of the small beam measured to the 1/e.sup.2 intensity level of the beam
profile should be approximately equal to 0.64 times the diameter of the
laser light guide tube for efficient coupling. A typical diameter of the
large laser beam entering the probe body is 6 millimeters measured to the
1/e.sup.2 diameter.
The beam-reducing telescope may be comprised of a 38 millimeter focal
length zinc selenide (ZnSe) positive meniscus lens separated by 41.8
millimeters from a 3.8mm focal length ZnSe positive miniscus lens
providing a beam reduction of ten times from 6mm to 0.6mm. This diameter
couples efficiently into the 1mm inside diameter of the hollow laser light
guide tube 34.
After passing through the laser light guide tube, the beam emerges through
the window 40 and is absorbed by the tissue or other absorbing material
contacted by or immediately adjacent to the outside surface of the window.
The window 40 is composed of a material such as ZnSe which transmits the
infrared radiation with negligible absorption and is heremetically sealed
into the tip 41 of the laser light guide tube. The window 40 may be a
plain parallel cylindrical optical element and should be highly polished
and anti-reflection coated to permit unattenuated passage of the laser
beam into the medium adjacent to the outside window surface. A flat window
will provide an emergent laser beam having a diameter slightly smaller
than the 1 millimeter laser light guide tube diameter with a beam profile
similar to the profile of the small diameter beam entering the laser light
guide tube.
If desired, optical power may be imparted to the window by curving the
inner surface of the window. With a proper spherical curvature on the
inner surface of the window, the beam will be focused to a small spot on
the window outer surface. Likewise, with a proper cylindrical curvature,
the beam will be brought to a line focus at the outer surface of the
window. The spot and the line focus cause the laser energy to be
concentrated by increasing the flux density W/cm.sup.2. An important
function of the window 40 is to permit the infrared laser beam to pass
through a laser light guide tube into the immediate surrounding medium,
such as water or a water-bearing biological tissue, while hermetically
sealing and isolating the interior of the laser light guide tube from the
surrounding absorptive medium.
An alternate embodiment of the invention which can be used for performing
intraocular victrectomy and ocular lensectomy is illustrated in FIGS. 5
through 11. In this probe embodiment, a probe body 37 and a case 51,
attached thereto, encloses an illuminating light conduit 44, a laser light
guide tube 34, and has a passageway 45 for passing irrigating fluid to the
vicinity of the probe tip shield 80. An additional passageway 78 is
provided to act or be used as a suction tube.
Fluid inflow for irrigating the area is provided by a fluid delivered
through connector 50, connecting fluid passageway tube 45 to a fluid
source (not shown) for replacing the volume of vitreous tissue removed
through the suction tube 78. Visible illumination for viewing the
vitrectomy site is provided through the light conduit 44 adjacent to the
laser light guide tube 34 and suction tube 78. The light conduit 44
protrudes into the surface of the shield tip 80 providing direct
illumination of the area of the intraocular vitrectomy.
FIGS. 8 - 11 illustrate the details of the vitrectomy probe tip
construction. The tip shield 80 terminates at the point 81 covering a
substantial portion of the light guide tube window 82, as can be seen in
FIGS. 9 and 10. The tip shield 80 also surrounds the light conduit 44 and
the fluid conduit 45 providing illumination and irrigation to the area
being treated outside the vitrectomy probe. The tissue passageway 85 can
be seen in FIG. 11 as a slot in the end of the tip shield 80 providing a
gap between the light guide tube, window 82, and the shield 80. The
suction tube 78 terminates at a point somewhat below the light guide tube
34 as can clearly be seen in FIG. 10. Thus, tissue can be drawn into the
passageway 85 for cutting by the laser beam coming from window 82 and
concentrated in the passageway between the window 82 and the tip shield
80. The cut tissue is then drawn into the suction tube 78 and out of the
probe.
In operation for performing an intraocular victrectomy, a suction device or
pump (not shown) is attached to a suction coupling connector 79 and
vitreous tissue pulled through opening of a tissue passageway 85 adjacent
to the tip shield 80. The narrow channel of the tissue passageway 85
confines the vitreous tissue to the area across and adjacent to the
surface of the beam concentrating laser window 82. The inner surface of
the window 82 is cylindrically curved to produce a line focus laser beam
at the surface of the window. The high flux density at the line focus
produces a cutting action to resect or remove the vitreous tissue within
the confines of the tissue passageway 85. The severed tissue is
consequently pulled into suction tube 78, through the probe body 90 and
out through the suction coupling connector to a suitable receptacle.
If the surrounding medium is water or water-bearing biological tissue, the
10.6 micrometer wavelength CO.sub.2 laser beam will be totally absorbed
within approximately 100 micrometers from the outer surface of the window.
The absorption coefficient for CO.sub.2 laser radiation in water is 1
.times. 10.sup.3 cm.sup.-1 which means that the radiation is attenuated to
37% of the initial value after traversing a distance of only ten
micrometers. Thus, the absorption of CO.sub.2 laser radiation may be
extremely well localized within an aqueous medium. The irrigation tubing
illustrated in the embodiments of FIGS. 2 and 4 may be used to provide a
flow of fluid, such as a saline solution, to the vicinity of the probe tip
41. Maintaining fluid in the vicinity of the window helps to prevent
tissue from adhering to the outside window surface during photocautery of
biological tissues.
The visible light conduit may be an annular fiber optic bundle for
transmitting visible light from an illuminating lamp 46 to provide
trans-illumination for viewing in the vicinity of the window. As in FIG.
4, the light conduit may be incorporated into an endoscope to provide
intraocular viewing. A mirror (not shown) may be provided at the end of
the endoscope to provide a view of the tip 41 and the window 40.
Thus, there has been disclosed a device for utilizing infrared laser beams
for cauterizing or removing of biological tissue in situ while surrounded
by an absorptive medium.
Obviously, many modifications and variations of the present invention are
possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood
that the full scope of the invention is not limited to the details
described herein and may be practiced otherwise than as specifically
described.
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Description  |
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