Neev J, Liaw L H, Raney D V, Fujishige J T, Ho P D, Berns M W
Beckman Laser Institute and Medical Clinic, University of California, Irvine 92715.
Lasers Surg Med. 1991;11(6):499-510. doi: 10.1002/lsm.1900110603.
Lasers are finding expanding applications in the field of dentistry. Cutting in soft tissue, hard dental material ablation, caries removal, and root canal therapy are only a few examples of dental laser uses. In this article, the application of short pulse ArF excimer laser to ablation of dentin and enamel is investigated. In particular, the effect of laser pulse repetition rates (PRR) and fluence levels on the efficiency of the ablation process and on the average thermal response of ablated surfaces is investigated. Ablation of dentin was found to be considerably more efficient than the ablation of enamel and depends exponentially on the laser fluence. Both dentin and enamel surfaces showed an increase in surface temperature with repetition rate. At lower PRR, however, temperature increases are very small. Surface temperature was also found to increase with laser fluence, although this increase is very small at laser PRR of 5 Hz or less. Tissue ablation rates were found to be comparable to or better than other nanosecond lasers, and left smooth surfaces, free of thermal damage. Microscopic examination of the ablated surface shows no crack formation, charring, discoloration, or any other thermal damage. The ablated surfaces appear to be very smooth, highly polished, and glossy looking as if they were subjected to thermal melting. This observation is indeed confirmed under scanning electron microscopy (SEM), where evidence of localized melting of the tissue is observed. Furthermore, a close SEM examination of the dentin surface reveals a selectively ablated intertubular dentin, while the remaining pillar-like dentin tubules are sealed off with fused peritubular dentin. At all fluence levels and PRR, the first three to four pulses impinging on an untreated enamel surface produced unusually large plumes of debris which were different in size, texture, and fluorescence emission characteristics from the ablation products of subsequent pulses. It is believed that these different ablation characteristics are a consequence of the pulsed ArF laser's ability to selectively remove residual matter from the more resistant enamel surface.
激光在牙科领域的应用正在不断拓展。软组织切割、硬牙体材料消融、龋齿去除以及根管治疗只是牙科激光用途的几个例子。在本文中,研究了短脉冲ArF准分子激光在牙本质和牙釉质消融中的应用。特别地,研究了激光脉冲重复率(PRR)和能量密度水平对消融过程效率以及消融表面平均热响应的影响。结果发现,牙本质的消融比牙釉质的消融效率高得多,并且与激光能量密度呈指数关系。牙本质和牙釉质表面的温度都随重复率升高而增加。然而,在较低的PRR下,温度升高非常小。还发现表面温度随激光能量密度增加,尽管在5Hz或更低的激光PRR下这种增加非常小。组织消融率与其他纳秒激光相当或更好,并且留下光滑的表面,没有热损伤。对消融表面的显微镜检查显示没有裂纹形成、炭化、变色或任何其他热损伤。消融表面看起来非常光滑、高度抛光且有光泽,就好像经过了热熔处理。在扫描电子显微镜(SEM)下确实证实了这一观察结果,在那里观察到了组织局部熔化的证据。此外,对牙本质表面的仔细SEM检查发现,管间牙本质被选择性消融,而其余的柱状牙本质小管则被融合的管周牙本质封闭。在所有能量密度水平和PRR下,撞击未处理牙釉质表面的前三到四个脉冲产生了异常大的碎片羽流,其大小、质地和荧光发射特性与后续脉冲的消融产物不同。据信,这些不同的消融特性是脉冲ArF激光能够从更具抗性的牙釉质表面选择性去除残留物质的结果。