1. Field of the Invention
The field of the present invention is ophthalmic surgical systems and methods, and particularly systems and methods for surgically incising corneal tissue.
2. Background
Presently, ophthalmic surgical systems and techniques focus on making an incision within the cornea such that the incision is disposed at a constant distance from the anterior surface of the cornea. For example, each of U.S. Pat. No. 5,993,438, U.S. Pat. No. 6,730,074, and U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 20050245915 teaches that making an intracorneal incision at a uniform distance from the anterior surface of the cornea is desirable. However, for a patient whose cornea has an irregular thickness profile, such incisions fail to address the irregularities during the surgical procedure when steps may be easily taken to correct the irregularities.
The present invention is directed towards a system and method for ophthalmic laser surgery. In performing the surgical procedure, a thickness profile of the cornea is generated, preferably using an optical coherence tomography scanner. A contact lens is placed against the anterior surface of the cornea. The posterior surface of the lens, i.e., that surface which is placed in contact with the cornea, may be curved or planar, with the lens being adapted to conform the shape of the anterior surface of the cornea to the curvature of the lens. The thickness profile is thereafter used to identify a scan region within the cornea. The scan region is disposed at approximately a uniform distance from the posterior surface of the cornea and preferably has a geometric shape which is best-fit to a plurality of points identified within the cornea, each of which is equidistant from the posterior surface of the cornea. Once the scan region has been identified, a laser scanner is employed to scan the focal point of a laser beam along a path within the scan region.
Accordingly, an improved a system and method for ophthalmic laser surgery are disclosed. Other objects and advantages will appear hereinafter.
In the drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to similar components:
Turning in detail to the drawings,
Forming the intracorneal incision at a substantially uniform distance from the posterior surface of the cornea may be beneficial for many different types of ophthalmic laser surgery. For example, such an incision may be used when harvesting tissue from the corneal endothelium. Having the incision disposed at a substantially uniform distance from the posterior surface of the cornea means that the harvested tissue has a uniform thickness and ensures that any irregularities in the thickness of the donor's cornea are not reproduced when the tissue is grafted onto a recipient's cornea.
By way of another example, such an incision may be made in a recipient's cornea for purposes of a partial corneal graft. For such a graft, the corneal tissue excised from the donor cornea is preferably removed using the methods taught in the prior art as described above, i.e. the excised tissue is removed by making an incision which is at a uniform distance from the anterior surface of the cornea. Thus, when the donor tissue is grafted onto the recipient's cornea, any irregularities in thickness which were present in either the recipient's cornea or in the donor cornea eliminated by virtue of the placement of the incisions within both corneas, and the cornea resulting from the graft will therefore have a uniform thickness.
The lens 34 is placed in contact with the anterior surface 36 of the cornea 30. The physical dimensions of the lens 34 are known in advance and are used in the surgical procedure to help properly position the focal point of the laser. The posterior surface 38 of the lens 34 has a curvature, and the lens 34 is formed of a material that is sufficiently rigid such that the anterior surface 36 of the cornea conforms 30 to the curvature of the posterior surface 38 of the lens 34. Such lenses and the associated support structure are well known in the art. In practice, the curvature of the posterior surface 38 of the lens 34 may be planar or radially defined, or may have any other appropriate geometric form.
With the lens 34 in place, for each of the select locations 40a-e, points 42a-e are identified within the cornea 30 using the posterior surface 38 of the lens 34 as a reference. Each of the points 42a-e is disposed at a predetermined distance from the posterior surface 32 of the cornea 30. A curved surface 44 is then best-fit to the points 42a-e. The actual shape of the curved surface 44 may be almost any shape, but it will generally depend upon factors such as the thickness profile of the cornea and the curvature of the posterior surface of the lens 34. If the lens 34 is an applanation lens, then the resulting curved surface could be planar. Similarly, if the curvature of the lens 34 is radially defined, then the resulting curved surface may also be radially defined, or it may be defined by multiple radii such that it is elliptical in overall shape.
By forming the curved surface 44 in this manner, it is at a substantially uniform distance from the posterior surface 32 of the cornea 30. This process, however, does not take into account variances in the corneal thickness which are small and localized. Therefore, the curved surface 44, near these small, localized variances, may be closer or further away from the posterior surface 32 of the cornea 30.
The portion of the curved surface 44 included within the operable scan range of the laser scanner (see
During operation, the controller 52 uses the information relating to the thickness of the cornea that was generated by the OCT scanner 54. From this information, the controller 52 constructs the thickness profile, identifies the scan region once the lens 34 is in place, and controls the laser scanner to scan the focal point within the scan region, thereby making the desired incision. User interaction with the controller 52 during this process is optional.
Thus, a system and method for ophthalmic laser surgery are disclosed. While embodiments of this invention have been shown and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that many more modifications are possible without departing from the inventive concepts herein. The invention, therefore, is not to be restricted except in the spirit of the following claims.