NEWS: Will a Bendable Laser Scalpel Make the Cut?
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=bendable-laser-scalpel&print=true
Extreme Tech -
March 4, 2009
Will a Bendable Laser Scalpel Make the Cut?
Flexible optical fibers would provide access to hard-to-reach areas of the
body
By Larry Greenemeier
Laser technology has proved to be an invaluable surgical tool, be it to improve eyesight,
repair torn
retinas, zap
kidney stones, or to delicately
remove spinal tumors. Still, despite more
than four decades of use in the operating room, laser surgery has been
limited by the fact that its energy travels in straight lines. This means that
a laser works best on areas that can be reached with a straight shot.
Maneuvering the beam so that it can reach out-of-the-way areas—without
damaging healthy tissue—is sometimes done, using a series of mirrors to
guide the laser beam, but this typically dilutes the laser's strength.
An approach to laser
surgery on the market for barely more than a year, however, seeks to add a
new level of flexibility to optical scalpels by directing the infrared energy
of a high-intensity carbon dioxide (CO2) laser through a flexible fiber tube
lined with reflective material. This gives the surgeon the ability to snake the
laser safely through the body to wherever it is needed without losing any of
the beam's strength.
The BeamPath CO2 laser energy system (manufactured by OmniGuide, an optics company in
Cambridge, Mass.) marks a significant improvement over optical scalpels used
over the past three decades to perform precision microsurgery, says Yair
Schindel, OmniGuide's vice president of clinical affairs and business
development.
"Going deeper into the body, to places where you couldn't see, was
impossible" with the old lasers, delivered through a large articulating
arm, he says. "If you couldn't see it, you couldn't get to it."
OmniGuide chose the CO2 laser—produced by exciting carbon dioxide gas
within a sealed tube—because it was already commonly used in operating
rooms, given its ability to effectively ablate, cut and cauterize tissue. It is
the most precise optical scalpel available, Schindel says, adding, other
laser-light wavelengths, such as those created using argon or krypton lasers, are
not absorbed as quickly by certain human tissues, "so they do more cooking
than cutting."
Still, conventional CO2 lasers have difficulty with incisions that must be made
at awkward angles. "If you think of a large tumor in the throat, you would
have to shoot the laser from [16 inches (40 centimeters)] away, manipulating
both the light and the patient to reach the tumor," Schindel says. The
alternative: a laryngectomy,
a less precise procedure in which all or some the vocal cords are removed.
OmniGuide's laser can also be used with a flexible fiber–tipped
endoscope. "The surgeon can go through the nose, mouth, ear or other small
openings," Schindel says, "and [laser] and view at the same
time."
Inside each BeamPath fiber, fewer than 20 microscopic layers of alternating,
custom-designed infrared glass and polymer form a reflective system known as a "photonic
band-gap structure." (pdf) The design stemmed from research conducted
by OmniGuide co-founder and CEO Yoel Fink in 1998 when he was a graduate
student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's (M.I.T.) Plasma Science
and Fusion Center. Fink and his colleagues studied ways to devise the "perfect mirror,"
a surface that reflects light of all wavelengths and from all angles, for the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the U.S. Defense
Department's the research arm. Since its 2000 start up, OmniGuide has invested
$70 million into researching and developing the materials and technology needed
to produce this superthin silicon fiber.
Water, which constitutes more than 60 percent of human tissue, absorbs CO2
laser energy well, enabling such devices to make a more precise cut than a
normal scalpel with minimal thermal damage to surrounding healthy tissue, says
Lee Nelson, a neurosurgeon with Boulder
Neurosurgical Associates in Colorado. BeamPath technology allows CO2 laser
energy to be transmitted down a hollow-core fiber and used as a handheld laser
scalpel, which Nelson says he used in 30 brain and spinal cord surgeries that
he has performed since October. "We knew about the advantages of the CO2
laser," he says, "but it had never been practical to use."
The BeamPath allows surgeons to do some procedures that a normal scalpel cannot
do. For example, when a surgeon presses a regular metal scalpel into an organ,
it depresses the tissue around it, potentially causing damage to healthy cells
surrounding targeted tumors. Unlike a normal scalpel, the BeamPath fiber does
not require tissue manipulation, Nelson says, adding, it also controls bleeding
better than a metal scalpel by cauterizing, or searing and sealing, nearby
blood vessels.
The flexible CO2 laser scalpel has special appeal for lower-back surgery, an
area where diseased tissue is often difficult to remove. "When you remove
this tissue with standard tools, you are sometimes left with arthritic tissue
in the spinal canal causing patients to continue to feel pain even after the
surgery," Nelson says. "With the CO2 laser, you can dissolve that
[damaged] tissue. Instead of pulling or tearing that tissue, we're now simply
ablating it." Nelson says that so far, the patients he has treated this
way have experienced less pain than those who have undergone traditional
surgery, but he adds that he needs a few more years to expand his sample size
enough to prove that the laser is the reason for the reduction in pain.
The cost of the technology—from $500 to $1,800 a fiber—has been the
major reason it is not used more widely yet. Nelson says he needs to prove that
the BeamPath improves patient outcomes to justify opening his wallet for more
of these devices. There are two potential limitations on the fibers: their
stability when energized and their inability to be sterilized, which means they
must be discarded after each use, Nelson notes.
The fiber used to channel the laser typically lasts four hours, tops, before
the laser burns through it and it needs to be replaced, says Bruce Haughey,
director of head and neck surgical
otolaryngology at Barnes–Jewish
Hospital in Saint Louis. He notes that the scalpel's fibers can be replaced
in a matter of minutes, however, it also takes longer to make incisions using
the BeamPath than it does using straight, line of sight CO2 lasers, because the
new technology delivers only about 20 watts, half the cutting power that
surgeons wield with the older variety.
Haughey, who has performed about 100 surgeries since 2007 with the BeamPath,
says he uses the device to remove tumors—to do minimally invasive
microsurgery on patients who would otherwise have had to go under the knife to
have malignancies removed from hard-to-reach spots, such as the base of the
tongue, the mouth floor, or the side walls of the pharynx (the part of the neck
and throat directly behind the mouth and nasal cavity). Haughey says that the
flexible BeamPath fiber extends the reach of the laser scalpel in close
quarters, easily and safely negotiating healthy tissue to reach targeted
growths. To do that in the past, "we could rather crudely bounce the laser
off a mirror, but (the beam) lost a lot of power that way," he says,
adding that he did that only once or twice out of the thousands of surgeries he
has performed.
BeamPath is now primarily used by orthopedic as well as ear, nose and throat
surgeons, but Schindel says that gynecologists, pulmonologists and urologists
are also interested in seeing if this technology can make the cut.
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