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Interferometric thermometry of ocular tissues for retinal laser therapy.

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Controlling the tissue temperature rise during retinal laser therapy is highly desirable for predictable and reproducible outcomes of the procedure, especially with non-damaging settings. In this work, we demonstrate a… Click to show full abstract

Controlling the tissue temperature rise during retinal laser therapy is highly desirable for predictable and reproducible outcomes of the procedure, especially with non-damaging settings. In this work, we demonstrate a method for determining the optical absorption, the thermal conductivity, and the thermal expansion coefficients of RPE and choroid using phase-resolved optical coherence tomography (pOCT). These parameters are extracted from the measured changes in the optical path length (ΔOPL) using an axisymmetric thermo-mechanical model. This allows the calculation of the temperature rise during hyperthermia, which was further validated by imaging the temperature-sensitive fluorescence at the same location. We demonstrate that, with a temperature uncertainty of ±0.9°C and a peak heating of about 17°C following a laser pulse of 20 ms, this methodology is expected to be safe and sufficiently precise for calibration of the non-damaging retinal laser therapy. The method is directly translatable to in-vivo studies, where we expect a similar precision.

Keywords: interferometric thermometry; laser; retinal laser; temperature; laser therapy

Journal Title: Biomedical optics express
Year Published: 2022

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