Pressure dependent direct transtissue transmission of eyewall, sclera and vitreous body in the range of 350-1050nm.

Z Med Phys

Institute of Medical Engineering and Mechatronics, Ulm University of Applied Sciences, Albert-Einstein-Allee 55, D-89081 Ulm, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: August 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how light passes through the various layers of the eye, particularly focusing on the porcine (pig) eye model to understand tissue transmission and absorbance.
  • It involves measuring the effects of different pressures and wavelengths on the transmission of light through the eyewall and vitreous body of ex vivo porcine eyes.
  • Results indicate that both pressure and wavelength significantly affect light transmission, with higher pressures leading to greater transmission, which has important implications for the safety and development of eye treatments using optical radiation.

Article Abstract

Purpose: For transscleral application of optical radiation or light to the eye, it is important to know the transmission and absorbance of the tissue layers of the eyewall. The impact of photochemical energy to the retina located directly at the point of contact with the radiation emitter must be considered as well as the absorbance in choroid and retina. Therefore, the direct transmission of ex vivo porcine eyewalls and vitreous body were measured in this study.

Methods: At ex vivo porcine eyes (N=221) pressure dependent transmission measurements were performed with a pressure inducing setup. Pressure and wavelength dependent direct transmission of eyewall and vitreous body of porcine eyes were described for different applied pressures (23mmHg, 78mmHg and 132mmHg). The transmissions were investigated within the spectral range of 350-1050nm. In addition to the complete eyewall transmission measurements, the transmission of sclera, vitreous body and water was measured individually and the transmission of retina and choroid was calculated.

Results: With increasing wavelength and pressure, a significant transmission increase of the eyewall could be achieved (p<0.05). At 400nm and 132mmHg the transmission raised to 0.10%. At 1050nm it increased up to a value of 12.22%. In the visible spectrum, the direct transmission was always below 3.17%. The differences in eyewall transmission of eyes with different iris colors were significant at low pressure. With increasing pressure, the effect strength decreased and the differences lost their significance.

Conclusions: The pressure and wavelength dependent direct transmission of the eyewall and the vitreous body significantly increased with increasing pressure. This results are benefical for technical and clinical safety, research and development of illumination devices. It is necessary to know the intraocular brightness in the eye during diaphanoscopy, photocoagulation application to determine hazards.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.zemedi.2020.02.003DOI Listing

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