4.6 Article

The differentiation of oral soft- and hard tissues using laser induced breakdown spectroscopy - a prospect for tissue specific laser surgery

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOPHOTONICS
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 1250-1261

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/jbio.201600153

Keywords

Spectrum Analysis [E05.1962.867]; Laser-Induced Breakdown-Spectroscopy; Tissues [A10]; Optical Tissue Differentiation and Identification

Funding

  1. Erlangen Graduate School in Advanced Optical Technologies (SAOT) by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation DFG)

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Compared to conventional techniques, Laser surgery procedures provide a number of advantages, but may be associated with an increased risk of iatrogenic damage to important anatomical structures. The type of tissue ablated in the focus spot is unknown. Laser-Induced Breakdown-Spectroscopy (LIBS) has the potential to gain information about the type of material that is being ablated by the laser beam. This may form the basis for tissue selective laser surgery. In the present study, 7 different porcine tissues (cortical and cancellous bone, nerve, mucosa, enamel, dentine and pulp) from 6 animals were analyzed for their qualitative and semiquantitative molecular composition using LIBS. The so gathered data was used to first differentiate between the soft-and hard-tissues using a Calcium-Carbon emission based classifier. The tissues were then further classified using emission-ratio based analysis, principal component analysis (PCA) and linear discriminant analysis (LDA). The relatively higher concentration of Calcium in the hard tissues allows for an accurate first differentiation of soft-and hard tissues (100% sensitivity and specificity). The ratio based statistical dif-ferentiation approach yields results in the range from 65% (enamel-dentine pair) to 100% (nerve-pulp, cancellous bone-dentine, cancellous bone-enamel pairs) sensitivity and specificity. [GRAPHICS] . Experimental LIBS measuring setup.

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