Emergency War Surgery NATO Handbook: Part IV: Regional Wounds and Injuries: Chapter
XXV: Laser Injury of the Eye
Laser Principles
United States Department of Defense
- Basics. A laser produces a beam of coherent light which travels at 186,000 miles per
second, the speed of light. This beam can vary in wave length throughout the
electromagnetic spectrum and can be visible or invisible. The common wavelengths of laser
rays correspond approximately to the wavelengths of colors in the spectrum, specifically,
the ultraviolet (below 400 nm), the visible (400-700 nm) , and the infrared spectra (above
700 nm). These various wavelengths of energy are absorbed by different layers within the
eye.
- Ultraviolet. Lasers utilizing the ultraviolet spectrum (below 400 nm) are
absorbed in the anterior segments of the eye, primarily by the cornea, as well as by the
lens.
- Visible. Laser radiations in the visible spectrum (400-700 nm) are absorbed primarily
within the retina by the pigment epithelium and the choroid. Penetration depth is greater
for the longer wavelengths (red) than with shorter wavelengths (blue).
- Infrared. Absorbtion of lasers in the infrared spectrum (above 700 nm) occurs in two
areas of the eye Lasers at the lower end of the infrared spectrum (1000 nm) damage the
retina and the choroid, whereas the cornea is damaged by lasers at the top end of the
infrared spectrum (3000 nm).
Table 14 - Typical lasers and their wavelengths
Krypton |
350 nm |
ultraviolet |
Argon |
514 nm |
visible |
Ruby |
694 nm |
visible |
CO2 |
10,600 nm |
infrared |
- Continuous versus Pulsed Waves. Continuous wave lasers, as the name implies, are
constantly emitted. These continuous wave lasers vary in energy output from fractions of a
watt up to the kilowatt range. In contrast, pulsed lasers deliver lower energy levels
(10-50 microwatts), but nevertheless exhibit a higher potential for eye injury. The
greater destructive power of the pulsed laser lies in the very short time interval
(billionth of a second, ns) over which the energy is delivered. On a comparative basis, a
20 mj pulse delivered over a 20 ns time period is comparable in power to one million watts
of continuous laser emission.
- Collimation. To collimate is to make parallel. The beams emitted from a laser, although
not perfectly collimated, are very close to being parallel. The converse is true of the
beams of light emitted from an ordinary incandescent light bulb, which diverge in all
directions. As a result of this small divergence of laser beams, the entire silhouette of
a soldier or the entire optical system of a battle tank can be covered by a single laser
source six kilometers away.
- Irradiance. Irradiance refers to the concentration of energy applied per unit area.
Irradiance is expressed in watts per square centimeter. The energy output of a particular
laser is a constant feature of that laser, whether it be the continuous or pulsed variety.
Laser beams can be focused onto a small target or defocused by beam divergence to cover a
larger area, the energy per unit area correspondingly increasing or decreasing according
to the square of the target size. For example, because of divergence, the area covered by
a beam at six kilometers is greater than the area covered by the same beam at one
kilometer; however, the energy impacted per unit area (irradiance) is greater at one
kilometer. Therefore, the "energy dose" received by the human eye at six km is
less than at one km. On the other hand, optical devices such as binoculars, periscopes,
and weapons-sighting devices all gather light and laser waves and magnify by converging
the rays onto a smaller surface area within the eye, thereby increasing the potential for
damage.
- Tissue Effects. The biological effects produced by lasers are different for continuous
and pulsed lasers. Continuous wave lasers produce primarily a thermal effect,
photocoagulation. Eye examination may reveal superficial and deep burns of the cornea with
opacification and tissue loss, or areas of retinal burns and necrosis. Pulsed lasers, on
the other hand, produce injury faster than thermal conductivity principles would predict.
Pulsed lasers produce mechanical effects, acoustic shock waves, ultrasonic waves, and high
energy fields. The end result is tissue disruption (manifested as retinal tears)
hemorrhage of the retina and the vitreous, and subsequent necrosis of the retina and the
vitreous.
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Operational Medicine 2001
Health Care in Military Settings
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Department of the Navy
2300 E Street NW
Washington, D.C
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Operational Medicine
Health Care in Military Settings
CAPT Michael John Hughey, MC, USNR
NAVMED P-5139
January 1, 2001 |
United States Special Operations Command
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MacDill AFB, Florida
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