|
|  Get related patents on CD |
| United States Patent | 5480396 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5480396.html |
| Inventor(s) | Simon; Gabriel (Maestre Nicolau #23-6A, 08021 Barcelona, ES);
Huang; Cheng-Hao (8843 Larwin La., Orlando, FL 32817) |
| Abstract | A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method includes the steps of
generating a laser beam and splitting the generated laser beam into
multiple laser beams which are simultaneously focused onto a plurality of
scanners. Each scanner in turn produces a predetermined scanning pattern
focused on the cornea of a patient's eye to ablate the cornea tissue and
with at least two beams simultaneously scanning and ablating the cornea
tissue. Scanning is controlled from a central processing unit to perform
the surgical procedure, removing a laser thickness of the cornea tissue to
provide a safer and more predictable surgical procedure in the reshaping
of the cornea. A laser ophthalmological surgery apparatus is provided
which includes a laser generating a laser beam, a beam splitter for
splitting the laser beam into a plurality of laser beams, and a plurality
of scanners, each positioned for receiving one of the laser beams from the
beam splitter and producing a predetermined scanning pattern from the
laser beam and impinging the scanning pattern upon the cornea of a
patient's eye. |
| |
|
Title Information  |
|
|
|
|
|
Drawing from US Patent 5480396 |
|
|
Laser beam ophthalmological surgery method and apparatus |
|
|
|
|
|
| Publication Date |
January 2, 1996 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Filing Date |
December 9, 1994 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Title Information  |
|
|
References  |
|
|
| *references marked with an asterisk below are user-added references |
|
U.S. References |
|
|
| Add a new US reference: |
| | Reference | Relevancy | Comments | Reference | Relevancy | Comments | 5437658 Muller 606/5 Aug,1995 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5411502 Zair 606/10 May,1995 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5325393 Nighan, Jr. 372/97 Jun,1994 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5312396 Feld 606/11 May,1994 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5304167 Freiberg 606/3 Apr,1994 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5172264 Morrow 359/349 Dec,1992 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5139494 Freiberg 606/3 Aug,1992 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5133708 Smith 606/5 Jul,1992 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5125922 Dwyer 606/3 Jun,1992 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4812613 Gorisch 219/121.74 Mar,1989 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4672969 Dew 607/89 Jun,1987 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 3621181 Charles Gilbert Young (Storrs, CT) 220/270 Nov,1971 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | |
|
|
|
|
U.S. References |
|
|
Foreign References |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Foreign References |
|
|
Other References |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other References |
|
|
|
|
|
References  |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Market Review  |
|
|
Technical Review  |
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
We claim:
1. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method for ablating a portion of a
cornea comprising the steps of:
generating a laser beam;
splitting the generated laser beam into a plurality of laser beams;
focusing each of said plurality of laser beams onto a scanner;
scanning each of said plurality of laser beams in a predetermined scanning
pattern for ablation of the cornea of a patient's eye;
directing said plurality of scanning laser beams parallel to each other
directly onto the surface of the cornea of an eye of a patient with said
plurality of scanning beams scanning a generally superimposed parallel
pattern to each other; and
controlling each said scanner from a central processing unit to thereby
surgically reshape the cornea of the eye.
2. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method in accordance with claim 1
in which the step of scanning a plurality of laser beams includes scanning
each of two laser beams, each laser beam being out of phase with the other
laser beam.
3. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method in accordance with claim 2
in which the step of splitting the generated laser beam into a plurality
of laser beams includes splitting the laser beam into two laser beams and
impinging each laser beam onto a separate scanner.
4. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method in accordance with claim 3
in which each scanning laser beam is scanning a generally parallel and
spaced beam from the other laser beam with each parallel beam forming a
superimposing pattern with a second parallel beam.
5. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method in accordance with claim 4
in which the step of controlling said scanning includes controlling two
scanners with the same central processing unit.
6. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method in accordance with claim 5
in which the step of generating a laser beam includes generating a laser
beam having a ultra-violet wavelength between 193 nm and 215 nm.
7. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method in accordance with claim 6
in which the step of generating a laser beam includes generating a laser
beam from an excimer laser having a wavelength of 193 nm.
8. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method in accordance with claim 5
in which the step of scanning each of said laser beam includes scanning
each laser beam with a pair of galvanometer scanners.
9. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method in accordance with claim 8
in which the step of scanning each of said pair of scanning beams includes
scanning each of said laser beams of the two beams in a plurality of
generally straight lines, each parallel to the other and each beam
traveling in an opposite direction from the other.
10. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method in accordance with claim 9
in which the step of scanning a pair of laser beams includes scanning each
of said laser beams of the two laser beams parallel to each other in a
generally circular beam pattern around the central portion of the cornea.
11. A laser ophthalmological surgery apparatus for ablating a portion of a
cornea comprising:
a laser for generating a laser beam;
a beam splitter for splitting the laser beam from said laser into a
plurality of laser beams;
a plurality of scanners, each positioned for receiving one of said laser
beams from said beam splitter and producing a predetermined scanning
pattern from the laser beam impinging thereupon;
focusing optics positioned between said laser and said beam splitter for
focusing each of said laser beams onto one said scanner;
directing means positioned between said plurality of scanners and said
cornea for directing each of said laser beams onto the cornea of a
patient's eye simultaneously in a parallel pattern for ablating a portion
of the cornea of the eye; and
a computer connected to each said scanner for controlling each said scanner
in a predetermined pattern whereby a plurality of laser beams can perform
a surgical procedure on a patient's eye.
12. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery apparatus in accordance with
claim 11 in which said beam splitter produces a plurality of out of phase
laser beams.
13. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery apparatus in accordance with
claim 12 in which said beam splitter splits the generated laser beam into
two out of phase laser beams and each laser beam impinged onto a separate
beam scanner.
14. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery apparatus in accordance with
claim 13 in which said directing means directs each scanning laser beam
generally parallel and spaced from each other onto a patient's eye.
15. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery apparatus in accordance with
claim 14 in which said computer controls each of said beam scanners
simultaneously.
16. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery apparatus in accordance with
claim 15 in which said laser generates a laser beam having an ultra-violet
wavelength between 193 nm and 215 nm.
17. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery apparatus in accordance with
claim 16 in which said laser is an eximer laser having a wavelength of 193
nm.
18. A laser beam ophthalmological surgery apparatus in accordance with
claim 17 in which each said scanner is a galvanometer scanner having a
mirror mounted to galvanometer. |
|
|
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
Description  |
|
|
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to refractive eye surgery and especially to
refractive eye surgery using a plurality of laser beams in the ablation of
cornea tissue to reshape the cornea of a person's or animal's eye.
The cornea is a thin shell with nearly concentric anterior and posterior
surfaces and a central thickness of about 520 micrometers. It has an index
of refraction of 1.377 and a nominal radius of curvature of 7.86 mm. The
epithelium, forming the anterior surface of the cornea, is about 70
micrometers thick in young people at the center. Underlying the epithelium
is a layer called Bowman's layer or Bowman's membrane, which is about 12
micrometers thick. This covers the anterior surface of the stroma, which
makes up the bulk of the cornea and consists primarily of collagen fibers.
The endothelium forms the posterior layer of the cornea and is a single
layer of cells.
About three-quarters of the refractive power of the eye is determined by
the curvature of the anterior surface of the cornea, so that changing the
shape of the cornea offers a way to significantly reduce or eliminate a
refractive error of the eye. The stroma is thick enough so that portions
of its anterior region can be ablated away to change its profile and thus
change the refractive power of the eye for corrective purposes, while
leaving plenty of remaining stroma tissue.
Various lasers have been used for ophthalmic applications including the
treatments of glaucoma, cataract and refractive surgery. For refractive
surgeries (or corneal reshaping), ultraviolet (UV) lasers (excimer at 193
nm and fifth-harmonic of Nd:YAG at 213 nm) have been used for large area
surface corneal ablation in a process called photorefractive keratectomy
(PRK). Corneal reshaping may also be performed by laser thermal
coagulation currently conducted with Ho:YAG lasers using a fiber-coupled,
contact and non-contact type process.
Refractive surgery has reached a new dimension due to the development of
the excimer laser (193 nm) and fifth harmonic of solid state laser (190
nm-215 nm) being used to photoablate the cornea tissue to reshape the
cornea. Several approaches have been proposed to deliver the laser beams
to the surface of the cornea including using a mask or diaphragm and move
the mask or diaphragm to block the laser beam to achieve a desired
curvature on the outer surface of the cornea. It has also been proposed to
use a scanner to move a laser beam spot on the outer surface of the cornea
to ablate the tissue to change the curvature on the cornea. Combining the
mask or diaphragm and scanner to block and move a laser beam is also used
to achieve a desired curvature on the outer surface of the cornea. The
mask or diaphragm approach requires a high energy laser and a rough or
stepped cornea surface is generated in the laser interacting with the
cornea. When the laser interacts with the corneal tissue, it generates
some water that remains on the surface of the cornea (like sweat water).
This changes the ablation rate when a new laser pulse reaches the cornea.
If this is not taken into consideration, an irregular pattern can be
induced called an "island". Central corneal islands have been described in
connection with prior laser beam delivery systems. The scanning or
combination of mask and scanner approach produces a smoother cornea
surface but nonsymmetrical beam profiles and the sweat water effect
creates an island effect which is caused by a nonsymmetrical ablation on
each side or point of the corneal surface. The present invention uses two
or more laser beams which multiple laser beams are split from one laser
source with an out of phase relationship. The spatial energy distribution
mode is scanned on the cornea or in the cornea simultaneously by using two
or more scanning devices controlled by a predetermined program in a
computer controller. Because the symmetrical laser beams are located and
moved on the cornea, the cornea will compensate for the uneven situation
of the sweat water effect when the laser interact with the cornea tissue
and non-symmetrical laser beam spatial energy distribution.
Refractive error can be divided in two categories. Spherical and
cylindrical. Spherical can effect the eye as myopic or hyperopic.
Cylindrical can effect the eye as myopic or hyperopic astigmatism. The
present invention uses a computer program to avoid ablation of the central
part of the cornea in the hyperopic astigmatism and thus results in a
safer, more predictable, and faster surgery procedure.
In the case of hyperopic combined with astigmatism of any cornea, the
center is never touched.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A laser beam ophthalmological surgery method includes the steps of
generating a laser beam and splitting the generated laser beam into a
plurality of laser beams which are simultaneously focused onto a plurality
of scanners. Each scanner produces a predetermined laser beam scanning
pattern and is directed onto the cornea of a patient's eye to ablate the
cornea tissue and with at least two scanning beams simultaneously ablating
the cornea tissue. Scanning is controlled from a central processing unit
to perform the surgical procedure. A laser ophthalmological surgery
apparatus is provided which includes a laser generating a laser beam, a
beam splitter for splitting the laser beam into a plurality of laser
beams. A plurality of scanners are each positioned for receiving one of
the laser beams from the beam splitter and producing a predetermined
scanning pattern from the laser beam and impinging the scanning pattern
upon the cornea of a patient's eye. The apparatus also includes focusing
optics for focusing each laser beam and optics for directing the scanned
beams onto the cornea in a predetermined scanning pattern for ablating a
portion of the cornea of the eye. A computer connected to each scanner
produces the desired scanning pattern which may be either a concentrical
circular symmetrical pattern or a linear parallel symmetrical beam
pattern.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will be
apparent from the written description and the drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a dual laser beam cornea ablation system;
FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram of the optics for a dual laser beam cornea
ablation system;
FIG. 3 is a scan pattern using the apparatus of FIGS. 1 and 2;
FIG. 4 is a second scan pattern which can be performed with the apparatus
of FIGS. 1 and 2;
FIG. 5 is a diagrammatic scan pattern similar to FIG. 4 with a pair of
laser beams scanning in a circular path and in the same direction of
rotation;
FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view illustrating sculptured surface curvatures
on both 90.degree. and 180.degree. for correcting hyperopic astigmatism;
FIG. 7 illustrates one pattern for correction of cornea astigmatism
correction; and
FIG. 8 is another pattern for correction of cornea astigmatic correction.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to the drawings and especially to FIG. 1, a block diagram of a
dual laser beam cornea ablation system 10 is shown having a laser 11 which
can be an excimer laser producing a laser beam 12 having an ultraviolet
wavelength of 193 nm. The laser beam 12 is impinged upon a beam splitter
13 which divides the beam 12 into two laser beams 14 and 15. Laser beam 14
is then impinged upon a galvanometer scanner 16 which is a typical scanner
using a galvanometer having a mirror attached thereto in which the
galvanometer produces a motion to thereby move the mirror having the beam
14 impinged thereupon to scan the beam. The scanning beam 17 is directed
with mirrors 18 or other optics to apply the beam to a patient's cornea
20. The beam 15 is applied to a second scanner 21 producing a scanned beam
22 onto a mirror or other beam directing optics 23 onto the cornea 20 of a
patient's eye 24. The beams 17 and 22, as directed by the optics 18 and
23, produce parallel laser beams 25 and 26 which simultaneously impinge
upon the cornea 20 of the eye 24 and have a controlled pattern in
accordance with the scanners 16 and 21.
In the present invention, a microcomputer 27 is connected to the laser 11
through the synchronization and every central circuit 19 and can be
programmed to produce any type of scanning pattern desired and is
connected to an X,Y coordinate scan driver 28 through the line 30 which
produces X,Y coordinate scan driver signals in the lines 31 and 32
connected to the scanner 16 so that electrical signals from the X,Y
coordinate scan driver 28 drive the scanner 16 in an X,Y coordinate
pattern. The computer 27 puts out identical X,Y coordinate scan signals to
the X,Y coordinate scan driver 33 through the connection 29 which in turn
puts out X,Y coordinate signals in the lines 34 and 35 which are connected
to the scanner 21 to produce an X,Y coordinate scanning pattern in the
scanner 21. The scanning beams 25 and 26 impinging upon the eye in the
case of an excimer laser has a beam wavelength of 193 nm but each beam may
have an out of phase relationship with each other beam on the spatial
energy distribution mode by using the transmittance and reflective
characteristics of the beam splitter 13.
The use of two or more scanning devices scanning two or more laser beams on
the outer surface of the cornea is used to ablate the eye simultaneously
with each beam. This can be accomplished in the patterns as shown in FIG.
3 in which the circle 36 indicates the cornea of the eye and the scan line
37 scanning in one direction is performed by one of the scanning laser
beams 25 or 26 while the scanner 38 scans simultaneously in the opposite
direction to the scanning beam 37 with both beams scanning simultaneously
and superimposed trace. However as can be seen, the scanning lines are
numbered 1a-1d and going in the opposite direction from the scans 2a-2d to
indicate that, in the case of two laser beams 25, scanning line 37 is
scanning in one direction while the laser beam 26 scans the lines 38 from
the opposite side and in the opposite direction from the laser beam scan
lines 37. Similarly as shown in FIG. 4, the cornea 36 is scanned in a
circular fashion with a scan line 40 going in one direction while the
laser beam 26 is scanned superimposed thereto along scan lines 41 from the
opposite side of the eye 36 with both beams scanning simultaneously. Beam
26 is shown scanning with the dashed lines while solid lines are
indicating the scanning of beam 25.
Referring more specifically to FIG. 2 of the drawings, the laser 11 which,
again may be an excimer laser producing an ultraviolet output beam 12, is
applied to a shutter 42 which in turn applies the laser beam to a focusing
lens 43. The focusing lens focuses the beam 12 upon a beam splitter 44.
The focusing lens 43 and beam splitter 44 are part of the focusing and
beam splitter 13 of FIG. 1 and produce the split beams 14 and 15. It will,
of course, be clear that the beam could be split into more than two beams
as desired without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The beam 14 is then applied to the scanning pair 16 of FIG. 1 which has a
first scanner 45 scanning the beam and applying the scanned beam to a
second scanner 46. Both scanners 45 and 46 are galvanometer scanners
having electrical galvanometers having mirrors attached thereto so that
the scanner 45 can scan the beam in a Y direction while the scanner 46 can
scan the beam in an X direction to give an X,Y control of the beam 17
being impinged upon the mirror 18 to form the scanning beam 25 onto the
eye 24 cornea 20. The scanner 45 has a Y coordinate signal applied thereto
through the line 34 while the scanner 46 has a line applied thereto
through the X coordinate line 35, which signals are produced in the X,Y
coordinate scan driver 33 which receives the control signals through the
line 29 from the central processing unit 27. The computer 27 has a control
screen 47 mounted thereto and also produces the X,Y coordinate control
signals over the connection 30 to the X,Y coordinate scan driver 28
producing the Y coordinate signal through the connection 32 and the X
coordinate signals through the connection 31 to a pair of scanners 48 and
50 which each produces one coordinate scanning signal which produces a
scanning beam 22 controlled with optics 23 to form the eye scanning beam
26 onto the surface of the eye 24.
It should be clear at this time, that an apparatus has been provided for
producing a plurality of laser beams which are simultaneously scanned over
the surface of the cornea of the eye to ablate a portion of the eye for
refractive correction to the cornea and which beams are produced
simultaneously on opposite sides of a portion of the cornea and away from
the center of the cornea for doing a controlled scan ablation of the
cornea.
The method of performing laser beam ophthalmological surgery includes the
step of generating a laser beam from a laser, then splitting the laser
beam through a beam splitter 13 into a plurality of laser beams and then
applying each split laser beam to an X,Y scanner or a pair of scanners
which control the beam which scan beam is then applied through mirrors or
optics onto the surface of the eye for performing the ablation of a
portion of the cornea of the eye. Multiple scanning beams are scanned
simultaneously and directed generally superimposed to each other in
accordance with a computer program controlling the X,Y coordinate scanners
controlling each of the pair of beam scanners for each of the laser beams.
The process includes focusing the beams upon the beam splitter as well as
directing the plurality of scanning laser beams onto the surface of the
eye and in the controlling of the beams for predetermined patterns, such
as illustrated in FIGS. 3 and 4.
FIG. 6 illustrates a typical cross-sectional view of a sculptured surface
curvature of an eye on both 90.degree. and 180.degree. achieved with
computer control for the hyperopic astigmatic correction while FIGS. 7 and
8 are algorithms of an ablated cornea for astigmatic correction, which
corrections are performed in accordance with the present apparatus through
the computer control of the computer 26.
In operation, the present multiple laser beam delivery system provides for
the operator to make two computer selections. One selection is for myopic,
hyperopic or astigmatism corrections which determines the dual beam
scanners scanning pattern. Information is fed to the computer for issuing
the necessary signals. The computer also has an input for the amount of
dioptic correction for a particular patient's eye. The computer then puts
out signals based on an algorithm for either myopic, hyperopic or
astigmatism correction and for the dioptics of correction necessary for a
particular patient's eye. The feedback signals from the scanner also
allows the computer to make corrections in the driving of the multiple
scanner pairs to manipulate the multiple laser beam simultaneously. Thus,
the computer produces a scan to ablate the cornea with a pair of laser
beams in accordance with the algorithm shown in FIGS. 7 and 8 for a
hyperopic astigmatic correction with the amount of correction being
determined by the diopter input.
It should be clear at this time, that the present invention is directed to
both a method and an apparatus for use in ophthalmological surgery on the
outer surface of the cornea or in the cornea to reduce astigmatism or
myopic or hyperopic correction or combinations of myopic and astigmatisms
or combinations of hyperopic and astigmatism corrections by using two or
more laser beams simultaneously with the multiple laser beams formed from
beam splitters from the same laser source with an out of phase
relationship with each beam obtained through the beam splitter and which
beams are scanned on predetermined computer controlled laser scanners to
perform refractive surgery on a patient's eye. The ablation with a
plurality of laser beams in accordance with the present invention produces
a refractive correction in the eye symmetrically ablating the central part
of the cornea tissue when correcting hyperopic astigmatism, thus resulting
in a safer and more predictable surgical procedure to correct hyperopic
astigmatism. However, the present invention should not be construed as
limited to the forms shown which are to be considered illustrative rather
than restrictive.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|
|
|
|
|