Photoablation Technology
Photoablation is the use of light to break down, vaporize and remove matter.
Spectranetics CVX-300® Excimer Laser facilitates photoablation via a variety of Spectranetics catheters to remove arterial plaques and binding scar tissue surrounding cardiac pacemaker leads.
- UV light pulse hits tissue for 135 billionths of a second (135ns); the duration of the laser pulse
- 50 microns penetration
- Billions of molecular bonds fractured per pulse
- After 135 billionths of a second, laser energy is not emitted
- Absorption vibrates the molecular bonds of the plaque
- Vibration of bonds heats intracellular water
- Water vaporizes, molecules break apart, and cells rupture
- Expanding vapor bubble forms in 100 millionths of a second (100 ms)
- 1,000 times the duration of the actual laser energy emission
- Expansion and collapse of vapor bubble breaks down tissue and clears by-products away from tip
- By-products of ablation are water, gas, and small particles
- Entire process time per pulse is 400-millionths of a second (400 µs)
- 4,000 times the duration of the actual laser energy emission
D006066-03
|

Understanding Laser

Photoablation

Corporate Compliance

Customer Service

Contact Us

Email Sign Up

Int'l Distributors

Management

Board of Directors

Mission Statements

Events
|