Smart Optical Fibers Could Save Lives 64
Roland Piquepaille writes "Lasers are now commonly used for surgery. With them, you can recover a better sense of vision. Or a tumor inside your body can be eliminated. But these laser light beams, which are currently enclosed inside optical fibers, can harm you if they escape from their enclosures. But now, according to Technology Review, MIT researchers have designed smart optical fibers which can monitor their status while the laser is doing its magic inside you and shut it down if a fiber wall is about to break. So far, the technology is only working in labs, but it could be used for medical applications in a few years."
A step forwards (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A step forwards (Score:1, Funny)
Nic0le is a PageRank spammer, MOD DOWN (Score:3, Interesting)
Mod him below 1, and the links will never show up to Google.
Re:Nic0le is a PageRank spammer, MOD DOWN (Score:1)
Re:Nic0le is a PageRank spammer, MOD DOWN (Score:2)
How often does this happen? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think self-monitoring fiber optics would be GREAT in the datacom industry... in the medical field its surely a 'nice to have'.
Re:How often does this happen? (Score:1)
Either it is hidden our like you sayed this is a "nice to have" concept.
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Did i type www.mit-new-headlines.com or www.slashdot.org? (funny that)
Re:How often does this happen? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How often does this happen? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How often does this happen? (Score:4, Informative)
LASIK is an external intervention. The laser source is delivering the energy almost directly.
The smart fibers aren't useful for surface operation, but for endocopies [wikipedia.org].
Endoscopie are internal surgery, but instead of cuting the patient open, you try to be the least invasive you can, and you only insert thin instruments throught small holes (either natural holes, or small incisions).
Optical fibers are usually employed to transmit images of the inside of a patient.
- But, in some type of endoscope, optical fibers can also be used to transmit laser pulse from an external source into the patient, and use the laser to "burn" targets, like tumors.
(I've never used or actually seen such endoscope. Only heard about them).
Here's where the smart fibers come into play
Altough, I've never heard about of such an operation going wrong.
Normally the system should be able to shut down in case of trouble, but them time it takes between the breaking of an optical fiber, and the time everything shuts down, some laser *may* have time to leak at the breaking site and harm the patient.
the point of such smart fiber is to detect faulty fiber *before* the actual break. ("This fiber is going to break soon, you should change the endoscope tip now !")
(Note: I don't know if the same fiber are used for everything (alternating in time) or if different fibers are used to transport visible-domain wavelenghts (lights / picture) and surgical laser)
There are also "laser-less" endoscopes.
- Other endoscope tubes may have an additionnal large channel used with some kind of miniature ultralong flexible tweezer to make biopsies (I've seen it in action). They're useful to access/investigate tumors "deep in the patient" like lung tumors (bonches are accessible entering from mouth), stomach ulcers (same path), or large-gut polyps (guess it, not the same entrance).
They're good, but they're large and the size of the target is limited because of the small size of the "tweezer-like" appendage (works best for biopsies)
- For surgical intervention in natural body cavities (like abdomen or knee joints) accessible from the skin surface, you use "image-only" optical fiber (the kind you also see in spy-movies where the spy use optical fibers to look through a ventilation or a keyhole), and pass long and thin instruments through 2 other small cuts on the surface.
(I've seen and assisted an operation on a women's ovaries. I've also seen such operation that were robot-assisted).
- And there's also a very trivial variant : a simple thin straight 2-3 mm large optical fiber to inspect the nasal cavities through the nostrils. Used by your regular doctor to inspect inside your nose. (I've used it. Great view on the mucosa, on the connection with the ears, on the "bumps" where the sinuses connects, etc...)
Ruining my app chances.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Incident Rate? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Incident Rate? (Score:2, Troll)
About 1 in 2792.5.
have there been any dangerous or even fatal laser misses
No, it's rather more dangerous or fatal when the laser *hits*.
how much safety will this new method actually bring about?
According to a January 2003 study by the Centers for Destructive Laser Control, lots.
Wow (Score:5, Interesting)
That possible? Gee, thanks for making me not want to have LASIK done on my eyes >_ Seriously, I hope this technology comes out of testing and into RWU (Real world use) very soon. If this kind of news leaks out, public paranoia will be all the rage
Re:Wow (Score:1)
Those funny acronym guys.
Is it worth it? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Is it worth it? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Is it worth it? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Is it worth it? (Score:2)
Re:Is it worth it? (Score:2)
Well, lets say it depends:
If you are in the
Re:Is it worth it? (Score:2)
Besides, 99% successful is a pretty low success rate
More information (Score:5, Informative)
Isn't tin toxic? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't tin toxic? (Score:2, Interesting)
Safety critical == timing, timing, timing (Score:3, Interesting)
with a formal spec and have the program 'proven'. No matter how you cut it (splash) the thing that bothered us most was that even when detecting a critical error there is always a timing factor, a certain number of cycles that would inevitably lie between the error being thrown and the system shutting down to a safe state. ADA is a strongly typed and very error safe language, but it is sluggish. A lot of damage can be done in a short space of time. In the end the solution was to break the prog into essentially two threads, one monitoring the other at all times and never more than 20ms from a total power shutdown. In 20ms you can do real damage with a laser that you cannot do with a mechanical device. I think few people realise just how much thought goes into these systems, and I have great respect for the difficulty of this problem.
A little overstated... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A little overstated... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A little overstated... (Score:2)
Well, Duh. Who on Slashdot hasn't?
Re:A little overstated... (Score:5, Informative)
Most older general-purpose surgical lasers that I'm aware of use a naked fiber, and I do believe it is a disaster waiting to happen. I don't know about the new lasers coming on the market today, but I have worked with 80's and 90's vintage lasers still in service and they have no protection. For example, the Laserscope 800 is a 20W green (523nm) or 90W IR (1064nm) Q-switched CW YAG laser for general surgery. Its disposable delivery fiber is a 300 micron step-index core with no protection other than the bonded plastic jacket with a diameter of about 1mm. Cheap telecom fiber is better protected than this! The same system is used on the Trimedyne 1000 and the Lasersonics, both of which are 100 watt YAG lasers. I intentionally broke a fiber on my Trimedyne at full power, and was amazed by how dangerous it can be. The fiber can easily be kinked or broken by accident, which instantly results in a white-hot meltdown and separation at the point of damage. The broken end of the fiber then springs back and vaporizes or ignites whatever it flops against, potentially including nearby personnel. It also randomly radiates incomprehensible amounts of extremely dangerous invisible light in God knows what direction, likely frying the retinas of anyone foolish enough not to have excellent leak-proof goggles on. Considering how much they charge for these disposable delivery fibers, one would think some form of metal armor could be included to reduce the chance of damage.
Re:A little overstated... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A little overstated... (Score:4, Informative)
QCW (quasi-continuous wave) would be a more correct term for the Laserscope. Indeed, in the scientific world, that what we would call it. However, in the medical laser industry, QCW isn't in the lexicon. I suppose it would confuse the doctors to have to learn more about how their lasers work. Instead, it is understood that a CW laser is one in which the active medium is continuously pumped, with or without a free-running Q-switch. This is how thew Laserscope works -- it is, in fact, Q-switched. The arc lamp in a laserscope runs as long as the unit is armed. The Q-switch does, too. At all times, the laser is producing a continuous train of very short pulses at about 20kHz. The exposure control is done with a mechanical shutter in the beam path which dumps the beam when it's not needed. The term CW is applied to lasers of this type to distinguish them from "pulsed" lasers in which the pump source is a flashlamp, even though both produce pulsed beams. For medical purposes, a Q-switched CW laser acts like a continuous beam, whereas a flashlamp pumped laser behaves completely differently. As you point out, in a plain semantic sense any laser with a Q-switch cannot truly be "continuous wave" -- but people call them that anyways instead of saying "continuously pumped". Even the manufacturers do this, as evidenced by Laserscope's website.
Re:A little overstated... (Score:3, Informative)
We all thought it was a little ridiculous - what idiotic anesthesiologist would use flammable tubing during ENT cases? - but it has apparently happened.
Re:A little overstated... (Score:2)
That's what I was thinking... why not just monitor the fiber's back-reflections like in OTDR eqiupment? Are high-power beamsplitters the problem? Just monitor the returning light, and if the profile for a particular pulse is vastly different from the one before it, well, don't let another pulse through. Drop a little beam dump in front of the output coupler or something--you can't get a faster shutoff than that.
I personally don't like the idea of a bare fiber being use
I wonder if... (Score:1)
Re:I wonder if... (Score:2)
Re:I wonder if... (Score:1)
Re:I wonder if... (Score:2)
Re:I wonder if... (Score:1)
Re:I wonder if... (Score:2)
Is this really a problem? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Is this really a problem? (Score:1)
Re:Is this really a problem? (Score:2, Informative)
Secondly, the these hollow fibers are designed for use in the mid-IR (CO2 laser @10.6m typically) for minimally invasive procedures where the fiber is inserted into the body through a small incision. The fiber is guided through and around obstacles, often times through arteries and into the heart, so the laser can ablate some tissue. Fiber failure is a very real concern
public health saves lives (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:public health saves lives (Score:2)
Health Experts sadly report that when comparing lives saved by Public Health and Surgeries and Medicines that patients still all died anyways in about 80 years.
An idea (Score:1, Funny)
freaking sharks with.... (Score:1)
I doubt it's really unsafe... (Score:3, Informative)
The thing here is that it is a collimated beam. The kind that doesn't really lose its power density over distance. So I can be burned many meters away. This light must be coupled into a fiber with a high numerical aperture lens - and by the same token the light must be collimated when leaving the fiber.
Straight out the end of a broken or cut fiber, the light is highly divergent. It would take less than a meter for the 20 W beam to become eye safe (but maybe not eye smart). The only way for a bare fiber to hurt anything is if it brushes right against it, and even then it's a pretty small wound compared to the size of any organ.
I'm interested to see their justification for all of this.
-m
What about a fiber fuse? (Score:3, Informative)
Basically light is absorbed at a point of damage in the fiber, creating a tiny plasma ball that burns backwards towards the source and destroys the fiber, preventing further output. The size of the plasma ball is very small (on the order of the size of the fiber core).
Maybe you just stuff some graphite between the bare fiber and the jacket. Then when the fiber core breaks it superheats a tiny bit of the graphite and begins the fiber fuse process - preventing further transmission of laser light.
And then maybe I just gave away a $1M invention.
-m