Investigating the Effects of Carbon Dioxide Laser Fluence on Oral Soft Tissue

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Dhafira H. Al- Dujaili
Raja K. Kummoona

Abstract

This study investigates the surgical and thermal effects on oral soft tissues produced by CO2 laser emitting at 10.6 micrometers with three different fluences 490.79, 1226.99 and 1840.4 J/cm2. These effects are specifically; incision depth, incision width and the tissue damage width and depth. The results showed that increasing the fluence and /or the number of beam passes increase the average depths of ablation. Moreover, increasing the fluence and the number of beam passes increase the adjacent tissue damage in width and depth. Surgeons using CO2 laser should avoid multiple pulses of the laser beam over the same area, to avoid unintentional tissue damage.

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[1]
D. H. Al- Dujaili and R. K. Kummoona, “Investigating the Effects of Carbon Dioxide Laser Fluence on Oral Soft Tissue”, IJL, vol. 1, no. B, pp. 63–66, Jun. 2002, doi: 10.31900/ijl.v1iB.167.

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