Bovine corneal stroma ablation rate with 193-nm excimer laser radiation: quantitative measurement.

Excimer lasers operating at 193 nm may become important surgical instruments in ophthalmology because of their ability to ablate tissue with excellent precision and minimal damage to adjacent tissue. However, the precision is limited by the accuracy of the measurement of the amount of tissue ablated per pulse at the fluence used. A measurement of the ablation rate of bovine corneal stroma over the range of fluences most likely to be useful for corneal surgery (50-400 mJ/cm2) is presented. The technique used produced reproducible results, the data from 47 animal eyes being averaged to further increase the precision. For this range of fluences, these results show a more precise measurement than previously published tissue ablation rate data. These results should be useful in accurately predicting the result of corneal surgery using the excimer laser if species differences are not major.