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Measuring and modeling elasticity distribution in the intraocular lens

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Presentation on theme: "Measuring and modeling elasticity distribution in the intraocular lens"— Presentation transcript:

1 Measuring and modeling elasticity distribution in the intraocular lens

2 Lens System Zonules Cornea Intraocular Lens Retina Ciliary Muscle

3 Lens Anatomy Lerman S., Radiant energy and the eye, (1980)

4 Helmholtz Accommodation

5 Coleman’s Theory of Accommodation
Schachar RA, Bax AJ Mechanism of human accommodation as analyzed by nonlinear finite element analysis  ANNALS OF OPHTHALMOLOGY 33 (2): SUM (2001)

6 Presbyopia

7 Presbyopia Onsets at about 40 years 100 % prevalence
Complicates Stabismus (cross eyed) Increases safety risks for pilots

8 Conceptual Elastic Model
Zonules Capsule Media Zonules

9 Lasering Zonules Media Capsule Laser

10 Photodisruption Femtosecond pulsed laser Nonlinear absorption
Breakdown only occurs above threshold Limited to focal spot No damage to surrounding tissue Small disruption sites: 1 to 10 mm Precise location

11 Acoustic Radiation Force
Gas Bubble Acoustic Wavefront Elastic Solid

12 Advantages Reflection more efficient than absorption Bubbles:
Approximate perfect reflectors High spatial resolution High contrast for anechoic tissues like lens Potential in-vivo procedure Localized measurement

13 Experimental Set-up Ultrafast Laser Water Gel Water Gel Water Gel
Porcine Lens Water Gel Porcine Lens Water Gel Porcine Lens Water Gel Porcine Lens Water Gel Porcine Lens Shutter Focusing Lens ND Filter Ultrafast Laser Mirror

14 Sampling 1 mm Sampling points

15 Bubble Displacement (Porcine Lens)
40 30 Maximum Displacement (mm) 20 10 1 3 5 7 9 Lateral Position (mm)

16 Bubble Size Dependence
(Int. Backscatter) ~ Bubble Radius Maximum Displacement (mm) R2=0.97 0.15 0.2 0.25 0.3 20 30 40 Push #1 Push #7

17 Cumulative Normalized Bubble Displacement (N = 12)
Lateral Position (mm) Rel. Maximum Displacement 2 4 6 8 10 Normalized for int. backscatter, mean curve normalized for 5 mm std. Error of the mean

18 Relative Stiffness – Porcine Lens
Lateral Position (mm) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8

19 Young’s Modulus – Porcine Lens

20 Conclusions Acoustic radiation force displaces bubble
Ultrasound tracks bubble Convert displacement into elasticity Lens elasticity Not homogeneous Function of radial distance Lifetime 4.9x longer in nucleus assuming outer4 = cortex, inner3 = nucleus Lifetime 8.1x longer in nucleus assuming 4 mm = nucleus, avg(1mm 9mm) = cortex Stiffness 3.0x in nucleus, assuming nucleus = inner3, cortex = outer4 Stiffness 4.3x in nucleus, assuming nucleus = 5 mm, cortex = 2mm & 8mm

21 Heys et. al., Experimental Setup
Heys KR, Cram SL, Truscott RJW Massive increase in the stiffness of the human lens nucleus with age: the basis for presbyopia? Molecular Vision (2004)

22 Heys et. al., Results (65 year-old)
Heys KR, Cram SL, Truscott RJW Massive increase in the stiffness of the human lens nucleus with age: the basis for presbyopia? Molecular Vision (2004)

23 Elasticity Distribution vs. Age
Heys KR, Cram SL, Truscott RJW Massive increase in the stiffness of the human lens nucleus with age: the basis for presbyopia? Molecular Vision (2004)

24 Light Multilayer Model Anterior Polar distance (mm) Zonules Capsule
2 Light 1 I H G F D E Polar distance (mm) C A B Zonules -1 Capsule -2 Posterior 1 2 3 4 5 6 Radial distance (mm)

25 Caution Not a direct model of presbyopia Ignore age-related geometry
Separate biomechanical contributions Average elasticity Elasticity distribution

26 Procedure Deformed Original Force Displacement

27 Optical Power the degree to which a lens converges or diverges light,
equal to the reciprocal of the focal length ra = anterior radius of curvature rp = posterior radius of curvature t = polar lens thickness n1 = index of refraction for lens n2 = index of refraction for vitreous

28 Elasticity Distribution (Varying Average Elasticity)
Multiplier A B C D E F G H I

29 Average Elasticity (Varying Average Elasticity)

30 Accommodation (Varying Average Elasticity)

31 Elasticity Distribution (Varying Elasticity Distribution)
H G F E D C B A

32 Average Elasticity (Varying Elasticity Distribution)

33 Accommodation (Varying Elasticity Distribution)

34 Lens Biomechanics Polar distance Radial distance

35 Elasticity Distribution (Example)
High Average Favorable Distribution Low Average Unfavorable Distribution

36 Accommodation (Example)
Low Average Unfavorable Distribution High Average Favorable Distribution

37 Conclusions Multi-layer model shows accommodation
Two presbyopia mechanisms: Increased average elasticity (known) Elasticity distribution change (new) Elasticity map needed for presbyopia surgery Lifetime 4.9x longer in nucleus assuming outer4 = cortex, inner3 = nucleus Lifetime 8.1x longer in nucleus assuming 4 mm = nucleus, avg(1mm 9mm) = cortex Stiffness 3.0x in nucleus, assuming nucleus = inner3, cortex = outer4 Stiffness 4.3x in nucleus, assuming nucleus = 5 mm, cortex = 2mm & 8mm

38 Colleagues Matthew O’Donnell Todd Erpelding Jing Yong Ye Christine Tse
Marwa Zhody Tibor Juhasz Gagik Jotyan Ron Kurtz

39 Biomedical Ultrasound Laboratory Biomedical Engineering Dept.
bul.eecs.umich.edu Center for Ultrafast Optical Science University of Michigan IntraLase Corporation, Irvine, CA Supported by NIH grant R21 EY015876


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