Affordable Access

Access to the full text

A new model for laser-induced thermal damage in the retina

Authors
  • Till, S. J.1
  • Till, J.
  • Milsom, P. K.2
  • Rowlands, G.3
  • 1 Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, Room PE206, Dstl. St. Andrews Road, Malvern, Worcestershire, WR14 3PS, UK , Malvern, Worcestershire
  • 2 Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, Malvern, Worcestershire, WR14 3PS, UK , Malvern, Worcestershire
  • 3 University of Warwick, Department of Physics, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK , Coventry
Type
Published Article
Journal
Bulletin of Mathematical Biology
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Publication Date
Jul 01, 2003
Volume
65
Issue
4
Pages
731–746
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1016/S0092-8240(03)00028-4
Source
Springer Nature
Keywords
License
Yellow

Abstract

We describe a new model for laser-induced retinal damage. Our treatment is prompted by the failure of the traditional approach to accurately describe the image size dependence of laser-induced retinal injuries and by a recently reported study which demonstrated that laser injuries to the retina might not appear for up to 48 h post exposure. We propose that at threshold a short-duration, laser-induced, temperature rise melts the membrane of the melanosomes found in the pigmented retinal epithelial cells. This results in the generation of free radicals which initiate a slow chain reaction. If more than a critical number of radicals are generated then cell death may occur at a time much later than the return of the retina to body temperature. We show that the equations consequent upon this mechanism result in a good fit to the recent image size data although more detailed experimental data for rate constants of elementary reactions is still required. This paper contributes to the current understanding of damage mechanisms in the retina and may facilitate the development of new treatments to mitigate laser injuries to the eye. The work will also help minimize the need for further animal experimentation to set laser eye safety standards.

Report this publication

Statistics

Seen <100 times