1. Field of the Invention
The invention is generally directed to the field of refractive surgery and is more particularly directed to a system, apparatus, and method for eye alignment and eyetracker engagement.
2. Description of Related Art
Extreme accuracy is typically required whenever surgery is performed. This requirement is underscored when the surgery is performed on a part of the body that is subject to involuntary movement. In the preferred field of the instant invention, refractive surgery is performed on a patient's eye in a common procedure known as LASIK, for example, or similar procedures such as PRK or LASEK. In all of these cases, a laser beam typically having a wavelength of 193 nm is used to photoablate volumetric portions of an exposed corneal surface to provide a new shape to the corneal surface for correction of visual defects.
In general, it is a problem to align the patient's eye. The eye is subject to saccades which are quick, involuntary movements of small magnitude. A person may voluntary shift their gaze during surgery; and furthermore, eye position stability is affected by the patient's heartbeat and other physiological factors. Moreover, there is still debate over what is the proper reference axis for alignment of the eye for laser refractive surgery. Some surgeons, for example, prefer to identify the center of the pupil, however, pupil center location is pupil-size dependent. Some surgeons use the Purkinje axis of the eye to align the eye at the therapeutic system. This can be problematic because the Purkinje axis is characterized by having an overlap of several reflexes of an illumination laser beam from the cornea. For a more detailed description of alignment axes, the interested reader is directed to Uozato and Guvton, American Journal of Ophthalmology, 103: 264-275, March 1987, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety to the fullest allowed extent.
In typical laser ophthalmic systems for correction of refractive defects, an eyetracker component of the system is utilized to track the motion of the eye during surgery, and to interrupt delivery of the therapeutic laser beam when tracking cannot be maintained. Various eye tracker technologies are commercially available and are not, per se, germane to the invention described herein below. It is however necessary to engage the eye tracker when it is locked onto the desired reference point on the eye. Often, the surgeon will engage the eye tracker manually when it “looks” to be properly aligned. This subjective technique is prone to error which may lead to decentered ablations and other impediments to satisfactory vision correction. Accordingly, the inventors have recognized a need for more reliability and accuracy in eye alignment, particularly as it applies to successful laser ophthalmic surgery.
In accordance with an embodiment of the invention, an ophthalmic laser surgery system including a therapeutic laser that outputs a beam along a beam axis and an eye tracker, incorporates a cooperating component that emits a probe beam having an optical axis which is co-aligned and concentric with the therapeutic beam axis and which emits a signal upon detection of a First Purkinje reflex of the probe beam and a Second Purkinje reflex of the probe beam when the First and Second Purkinje reflections are co-aligned and concentric. The signal is then used to trigger operation of the eye tracker.
In another embodiment, an eye tracker system that monitors the movement of a patient's eye during an ophthalmic procedure can be automatically engaged upon receiving a signal emitted by a cooperative, separate, diagnostic component that functions by suitably detecting at least two different reflections of a probe beam from the cornea, when the component detects a concentric co-alignment of a First Purkinje reflex and a Second Purkinje reflex of the probe beam from the patient's eye.
Another embodiment of the invention is directed to a method for aligning an optical axis of a patient's eye with a therapeutic axis of an ophthalmic therapeutic apparatus and/or a diagnostic axis of an ophthalmic diagnostic apparatus, and includes the steps of directing a probe beam having a propagation axis that is co-aligned and concentric with the therapeutic axis and/or diagnostic axis onto the eye, detecting a First Purkinje reflex of the probe beam, detecting a Second Purkinje reflex of the probe beam, and upon detecting a concentric co-alignment of the First and Second Purkinje reflections from the eye, establishing the alignment of the patient's optical axis with the therapeutic axis and/or diagnostic axis. In an aspect of this embodiment, a further step includes generating a signal upon detection of the concentric co-alignment of the First and Second Purkinje reflections. In a further aspect, the method includes using the signal to engage an eye tracker device that is in cooperative engagement with the ophthalmic therapeutic apparatus and/or the ophthalmic diagnostic apparatus.
Another embodiment is directed to an ophthalmic system for measuring and/or correcting a vision defect of a patient's eye, including a diagnostic component for measuring the vision defect or, preferably, a therapeutic component for correcting the vision defect, and an eye tracking component in cooperative engagement with the diagnostic component and/or the therapeutic component for monitoring the movement of the eye in regard to the measurement and/or correction of the vision defect, wherein engaging the eye tracking component when the optical axis of the patient's eye is aligned with a beam axis of the diagnostic component and/or the therapeutic component is accomplished by providing a device component in cooperative engagement with the system that emits a probe beam into the eye having an optical axis that is co-aligned and concentric with the beam axis of the diagnostic component and/or the therapeutic component, detecting a First Purkinje reflex of the probe beam and a Second Purkinje reflex of the probe beam when the First and Second Purkinje reflections are co-aligned and concentric, and generating a signal upon the detection, and using the signal to trigger operation of the eye tracking component.
In all of the foregoing embodiments, an optical coherence tomography (OCT) device is the preferable component and means for generating the probe beam, detecting the Purkinje reflections, and generating the signal for triggering the eye tracker.
These and other objects of the present invention will become more readily apparent from the detailed description to follow. However, it should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating the preferred embodiments of the invention, are given by way of illustration only, since various changes and modifications within the spirit and scope of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art based upon the description and drawings herein and the appended claims.
The invention is directed to apparatus and methods for objectively aligning the optical axis of a patient's eye with the beam axis of a diagnostic or a therapeutic component, for example, an excimer laser, of a refractive vision correction surgery system. An embodiment of the invention is further directed to the automatic engagement or triggering of an eyetracker in such a system. The invention is based on the detection of the co-alignment of First and Second Purkinje reflections from the patient's eye, as illustrated in
Ocular pachymetry, particularly corneal pachymetry (corneal thickness measurement), is a valuable measurement parameter in surgical ophthalmic procedures such as refractive vision correction, for example. Several techniques have been developed to measure corneal pachymetry including, for example, ultrasonic measurements and optical coherence tomography (OCT).
The principles of OCT are familiar to those skilled in the art and for the purpose of the present invention encompass optical coherence reflectometry and other forms of optical interferometry that can be used to obtain corneal thickness measurements. The interested reader is directed to Hitzenberger, “Measurement of Corneal Thickness by Low Coherence Interferometry”, Applied Optics, Vol. 31, No. 31 (November 1992) which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety to the extent allowed by applicable laws and rules. In essence, a signal from an OCT apparatus is generated only when the beam path of the OCT probe radiation reflected from a measurement surface is equal to a reference beam path established in the OCT apparatus to within a distance corresponding to the temporal coherence length of the OCT radiation. In order to measure the central thickness of the cornea the OCT device must recognize the reflection of the probe beam from the anterior corneal surface 12 corresponding to the First Purkinje reflex 22, and reflection from the posterior corneal surface 14 corresponding to the Second Purkinje reflex 24. As shown in
A system embodiment of the invention is shown schematically in
While various advantageous embodiments have been chosen to illustrate the invention, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that changes and modifications can be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 13 028.4 | Mar 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/01555 | 2/18/2004 | WO | 5/31/2006 |