A transient two-dimensional optical-thermal model that accounts for dynamic
changes in optical and thermal properties with temperature was developed t
o investigate the mechanisms leading to thermal damage during laser tissue
soldering, The model was implemented using the electrical circuit simulator
Simulation Program with Integrated Circuit Emphasis (SPICE), Electrical an
alogies for the optical and thermal behavior of the solder and tissue were
established. With these analogies, light was propagated using a flux repres
entation of the light and the electrical simulator was used to calculate he
at transfer with an algorithm based on the finite difference technique. The
rmal damage was calculated using the Arrhenius rate process relation. Tempe
rature-dependent absorption and scattering coefficients, thermal conductivi
ty and thermal diffusivity, were incorporated in the Spice Optical-Thermal
Simulation (SPOTS), as well as the time-domain behavior of a scanning laser
source.
Experimental results from an in vitro study performed using an 808-nm diode
laser in conjunction with indocyanine green doped albumin protein solders
to repair bovine aorta specimens compared favorably with numerical results
obtained from SPOTS using dynamic optical and thermal properties. The maxim
um surface temperature was over-estimated by almost 10% when dynamic proper
ties were not taken into account, This difference corresponds to over two o
rders of magnitude difference in terms of the Arrhenius tissue damage integ
ral. The incorporation of dynamic changes in optical and thermal properties
of tissue during laser-induced heating represents a significant advance in
computer modeling of laser tissue interactions.