4.4 Article

LONG-TERM SAFETY, HIGH-RESOLUTION IMAGING, AND TISSUE TEMPERATURE MODELING OF SUBVISIBLE DIODE MICROPULSE PHOTOCOAGULATION FOR RETINOVASCULAR MACULAR EDEMA

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LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/IAE.0b013e3182206f6c

Keywords

Arrhenius integral; diabetic retinopathy; diode; laser; macular edema; micropulse; retinal photocoagulation; safety; subthreshold; subvisible; tissue temperature

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Purpose: To determine the long-term safety of high-density subvisible diode micropulse photocoagulation (810 nm), compare the clinical findings with computational modeling of tissue hyperthermia and to report results for a subset of eyes treated for diabetic macular edema (ME) documented pre- and postoperatively by spectral-domain optical coherence tomography. Method: All eyes treated for ME from diabetic retinopathy (diabetic ME) and branch retinal vein occlusion between April 2000 and January 2010 were reviewed for subvisible diode micropulse laser-induced retinal damage. Therapeutic outcomes were reviewed for a subgroup treated for diabetic ME with pre- and postoperative spectral-domain optical coherence tomography. Laser-induced retinal thermal effects were modeled computationally using Arrhenius formalism. Results: A total of 252 eyes (212 diabetic ME, 40 branch retinal vein occlusion) of 181 patients qualified. None of the 168 eyes treated at irradiance <350 W/cm(2) and 7 of 84 eyes at >= 590 W/cm(2) had retinal damage (P = 0.0001) (follow-up 3-120 months, median, 47). Sixty-two eyes of 48 patients treated for diabetic ME with pre- and postoperative spectral-domain optical coherence tomography with median 12 months follow-up had no retinal injury by infrared, red-free, or fundus autofluorescence photos; fluorescein angiography or indocyanine green angiography; or spectral-domain optical coherence tomography. Central foveal thickness (P = 0.04) and maximum macular thickness decreased (P < 0.0001). Modeling of retinal hyperthermia demonstrates that the sublethal clinical regimen corresponds to Arrhenius integral >0.05, while damage is likely to occur if it exceeds 1. Conclusion: Subvisible diode micropulse can effectively treat retinovascular ME without laser-induced retinal damage, consistent with Arrhenius modeling of pulsed hyperthermia. RETINA 32:375-386, 2012

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