Background and objectives: The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of optical pulse duration on stone retropulsion during Ho:YAG (lambda = 2.12 microm) laser lithotripsy.
Study design/materials and methods: A clinical Ho:YAG laser with pulse durations was employed to fragment calculus phantoms and to evaluate stone phantom retropulsion. At a given pulse energy, optical pulse durations were divided into two discrete conditions: short pulse (tau(p): 120 to approximately 190 microseconds at FWHM) and long pulse (tau(p): 210 to approximately 350 microseconds at FWHM). Plaster of Paris calculus phantoms were ablated at different energy levels using optical fibers of varying diameters (273, 365, and 550 microm in core size). The dynamics of the recoil action of a calculus phantom was monitored using a high-speed camera; the laser-induced craters were evaluated with optical coherent tomography (OCT). Bubble formation and collapse were recorded with a fast flash photography setup, and acoustic transients were measured with a hydrophone.
Results: Shorter pulse durations produced more stone retropulsion than longer pulses at any given pulse energy. Regardless of pulse duration, higher pulse energy and larger fibers resulted in larger ablation volume and retropulsion (P<0.05). For shorter pulse durations, more rapid bubble expansion was observed and higher amplitudes of the collapse pressure wave were measured (P<0.05).
Conclusion: Less retropulsion and equivalent fragmentation occurred when Ho:YAG pulse duration increased.
(c) 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.