Intraocular carbon dioxide laser photocautery. II. Preliminary report of clinical trials
J. B. Miller, M. R. Smith and D. S. Boyer
Carbon dioxide laser photocautery was used successfully intraocularly in
human patients to seal fibrovascular fronds and retinal tears at the time
of vitrectomy. Closure of rubeotic vessels in the iris was demonstrated
histologically. The 10.6-microgram infrared radiation was delivered to the
intraocular treatment site by means of 1.5-mm-diameter photocautery probe
containing a 1.0-mm-diameter lumen closed at the end with an infrared
transmitting window. Treatment was localized to the tissue adjacent to the
window. Typical energy dosage was 0.4 W for 2 to 4 s duration. These early
clinical trials were carried out under the guidelines established by the
Food and Drug Administration; informed consent clearly outlined the
experimental nature of these studies.