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1.
J Biomed Mater Res B Appl Biomater ; 109(4): 486-495, 2021 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32869958

To avoid excessive tissue removal and collateral damage, the high-power density laser is apt for dental surgery also need to have high precision. For high-precision dental surgery with minimal tissue damage, the present work frames a method to predict laser ablation profile based on surface morphology and chemical composition of dentin. The surface morphology and chemical composition were studied on different dentin samples using scanning electron microscope (SEM) and Energy Dispersive X-ray Analysis (EDAX), respectively. The key laser ablation parameters (ω0 , Deff , and Fth ) were determined by laser irradiation study using 800 nm, Ti:Sapphire femtosecond laser at processing condition of 100 fs, 10 kHz and 10 mm/s. The dentin samples show a strong linear correlation between physiochemical characteristics and laser ablation parameters. The surface morphology exhibits a negative linear correlation with threshold fluence, whereas the converse is true for chemical composition. The laser ablation parameters of a random dentin sample are derived from the knowledge of linearity data. From the obtained laser ablation parameters, the complete theoretical ablation profile is constructed and validated with experimental ablation profile. Even though the surface morphology of dentin shows high linearity, the concentration of Ca and P can be used as the most feasible probe in clinical settings. Furthermore, the laser ablation rate and ablation efficiency are predicted by the method to optimize the laser processing condition for any specific teeth. The versatility of the method overcomes the problem of heterogeneity on various teeth and simplifies the method of finding optimal laser processing condition for immaculate laser surgery.


Dentin/chemistry , Laser Therapy , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Spectrometry, X-Ray Emission , Algorithms , Chemical Phenomena , Dentin/radiation effects , Dentin/ultrastructure , Hot Temperature , Humans , Laser Therapy/adverse effects , Molar/chemistry
2.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 115: 104256, 2021 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33338963

For high precision laser surgery, noninvasive tool for prediction of laser ablation profile beforehand is imperative. The present study proposed a method to utilize nondestructive FTIR and Raman probes for predicting laser ablation profile overcoming the challenge of heterogeneity on individual target tissue. By ascribing the chemical heterogeneity of teeth drive their differential machining capability, the study establishes a correlation between the chemical composition and their ablation parameters (ω0,Deff and Fth). The chemical composition of teeth was obtained by noninvasive tools (FTIR and Raman) in terms of absorption peak intensity. To further correlate with key laser ablation parameters, the laser irradiation study was carried out using 800 nm, 100 fs, Ti:Sapphire laser. The surface morphology of irradiated sample was measured by optical profiler. A strong correlation was observed between laser ablation parameters and peak intensity of phosphate group for both FTIR and Raman spectroscopy. The concentration of phosphate group shows a positive relationship to ablation threshold fluence, while the effective Gaussian beam radius and effective energy penetration depth show negative correlation. Both nondestructive probes show good linearity which enable us to extrapolate the key laser ablation parameters for predicting laser ablation profile on random dentin and enamel samples. The ablation profiles predicted based on both FTIR and Raman are well-matched in dentin, whereas it shows a slight deviation in enamel. The predicted profiles are consistent with experimental results at lower power whereas it shows a slight deviation at higher power due to screening effect. Thus, FTIR and Raman probes can be used to predict laser ablation profile nondestructively in real-time and obviate the need for trial runs. Furthermore, the present study has predicted the laser ablation rate and ablation efficiency for performing laser surgery in optimum laser processing conditions irrespective of teeth heterogeneity.


Laser Therapy , Tooth , Dentin , Humans , Lasers , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared
3.
Lasers Surg Med ; 51(9): 797-807, 2019 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31168853

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The employability of the non-invasive femtosecond laser ablation technique for dental treatment has been severely limited by its low ablation rate despite the advantage of minimal tissue damage. The study explores a means of improving the femtosecond laser ablation rate and efficiency by physiochemical surface modification. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Surface modification of dental hard tissues has been carried out by food graded orthophosphoric acid and Carie care gel pretreatment. The laser ablation characteristics were studied by using a Ti:Sapphire laser (10 kHz, 10 mm/s, 100 fs, 800 nm) to ascertain the influence of pretreatment. Surface morphology and chemical composition were obtained by using an optical profiler, SEM and EDAX. RESULTS: The ablation threshold fluence decreased by almost one-third whereas the ablation rate and ablation efficiency nearly tripled upon pretreatment. The microstructural and compositional analysis clearly reveals that surface modification and demineralization reduce the threshold fluence and increase the ablation rate by effective utilization of the laser beam energy. The pretreatment effect is more pronounced in orthophosphoric acid as compared with Carie care gel. CONCLUSIONS: Physiochemical surface modification can be an efficient method to improve the laser ablation rate and ablation efficiency. Compositional analysis can be an elegant tool for pre-surgery determination of laser ablation characteristics. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCES: Pretreatment surface modification can be an effective way to overcome the limitation of the femtosecond laser for tooth preparation in the clinical setting by strongly enhancing the ablation rate. An enhanced ablation rate along with de nova prediction of ablation characteristics will enable the clinician to perform dental surgery in real time with minimal tissue damage. Lasers Surg. Med. © 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Dental Etching/methods , Laser Therapy , Tooth/radiation effects , Adolescent , Adult , Humans , Laser Therapy/methods , Microscopy, Electron , Surface Properties/radiation effects , Time Factors , Tooth/anatomy & histology , Young Adult
4.
Lasers Med Sci ; 34(4): 693-701, 2019 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30280299

To predict the laser ablation profile on dental hard tissue which will enable the user to optimize laser parameters so as to carry out the laser treatment with minimal tissue damage. The present study constructs a mathematical model to predict the ablation profile based on Gaussian beam distribution of laser intensity and correlates the model with experimentally obtained ablation parameters (effective Gaussian beam radius, ablation threshold fluence, and effective energy penetration depth). To obtain the ablation parameters, laser ablation experiments were carried out on dental hard tissues using Ti:Sapphire femtosecond laser (800 nm, 100 fs, 10 kHz). The method is further extended to predict the ablation rate and efficiency as well. The profile predicted from the mathematical model is compared with that of experimental results. It is found that the predicted ablation profile agrees well with the experimental profile for both enamel and dentin except a slight deviation at higher fluence for dentin. The calculated ablation rate is comparable to that of experimental results whereas for ablation efficiency appreciable deviation is observed in the case of dentin. The model succinctly predicts the ablation profile, ablation rate, and ablation efficiency which will enable to perform dental surgery at optimized laser processing conditions with high precision thus reducing the tissue damage appreciably. Once the details of lesion are known through proper diagnostic tools, the method enables the user to readily obtain optimum laser parameters. It can be used as a handy reference for dentists to perform damage-free surgery, ensuring quicker healing.


Laser Therapy , Lasers , Tooth/radiation effects , Tooth/surgery , Dental Enamel/radiation effects , Dental Enamel/surgery , Dentin/radiation effects , Dentin/surgery , Humans , Time Factors
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