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Three-dimensional transient simulation of CO2 laser tissue vaporization and experimental evaluation with a hydrogel phantom
Author(s) -
Kazuma Sudo,
Yu Shimojo,
Takahiro Nishimura,
Kunio Awazu
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
journal of innovative optical health sciences/journal of innovation in optical health science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.421
H-Index - 24
eISSN - 1793-5458
pISSN - 1793-7205
DOI - 10.1142/s179354582250016x
Subject(s) - vaporization , laser , imaging phantom , materials science , irradiation , biomedical engineering , photothermal therapy , optics , chemistry , nanotechnology , physics , medicine , organic chemistry , nuclear physics
A quantitative analysis method of CO 2 laser treatments promotes laser treatment performance and rapid clinical application of novel treatment devices. The in silico clinical trial approach, which is based on computational simulation of light-tissue interactions using the mathematical model, can provide quantitative data. Although several simulation methods of laser tissue vaporization with CO 2 laser treatments have been proposed, validations of the CO 2 laser wavelength have been insufficient. In this study, we demonstrated a tissue vaporization simulation using a CO 2 laser and performed the experimental validation using a hydrogel phantom with constant physical parameters to evaluate the simulation accuracy of the vaporization process. The laser tissue vaporization simulation consists of the calculation of light transport, photothermal conversion, thermal diffusion, and phase change in the tissue. The vaporization width, depth, and area with CO 2 laser irradiation to a tissue model were simulated. The simulated results differed from the actual vaporization width and depth by approximately 20% and 30%, respectively, because of the solubilization of the hydrogel phantom. Alternatively, the simulation vaporization area for all light irradiation parameters, which is related to the vaporization amount, agreed well with the actual vaporization values. These results suggest that the computational simulation can be used to evaluate the amount of tissue vaporization in the safety and effectiveness analysis of CO 2 laser treatments.

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