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Dive into the research topics where T. Joshua Pfefer is active.

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Featured researches published by T. Joshua Pfefer.


Lasers in Surgery and Medicine | 1999

Holmium:YAG laser lithotripsy: A dominant photothermal ablative mechanism with chemical decomposition of urinary calculi

Kin F. Chan; George J. Vassar; T. Joshua Pfefer; Joel M.H. Teichman; Randolph D. Glickman; Susan T. Weintraub; Ashley J. Welch

Evidence is presented that the fragmentation process of long‐pulse Holmium:YAG (Ho:YAG) lithotripsy is governed by photothermal decomposition of the calculi rather than photomechanical or photoacoustical mechanisms as is widely thought. The clinical Ho:YAG laser lithotriptor (2.12 μm, 250 μs) operates in the free‐running mode, producing pulse durations much longer than the time required for a sound wave to propagate beyond the optical penetration depth of this wavelength in water. Hence, it is unlikely that shock waves are produced during bubble formation. In addition, the vapor bubble induced by this laser is not spherical. Thus the magnitude of the pressure wave produced at cavitation collapse does not contribute significantly to lithotripsy.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2001

Photothermal coagulation of blood vessels: A comparison of high-speed optical coherence tomography and numerical modelling

Jennifer K. Barton; Andrew M. Rollins; Siavash Yazdanfar; T. Joshua Pfefer; Volker Westphal; Joseph A. Izatt

Optical-thermal models that can accurately predict temperature rise and damage in blood vessels and surrounding tissue may be used to improve the treatment of vascular disorders. Verification of these models has been hampered by the lack of time- and depth-resolved experimental data. In this preliminary study, an optical coherence tomography system operating at 4-30 frames per second was used to visualize laser irradiation of cutaneous (hamster dorsal skin flap) blood vessels. An argon laser was utilized with the following parameters: pulse duration 0.1-2.0 s, spot size 0.1-1.0 mm, power 100-400 mW. Video microscopy images were obtained before and after irradiations, and optical-thermal modelling was performed on two irradiation cases. Time-resolved optical coherence tomography and still images were compared with predictions of temperature rise and damage using Monte Carlo and finite difference techniques. In general, predicted damage agreed with the actual blood vessel and surrounding tissue coagulation seen in images. However, limitations of current optical-thermal models were identified, such as the inability to model the dynamic changes in blood vessel diameter that were seen in the optical coherence tomography images.


Applied Optics | 2002

Multiple-fiber probe design for fluorescence spectroscopy in tissue

T. Joshua Pfefer; Kevin T. Schomacker; M. N. Ediger; Norman S. Nishioka

The fiber-optic probe is an essential component of many quantitative fluorescence spectroscopy systems, enabling delivery of excitation light and collection of remitted fluorescence in a wide variety of clinical and laboratory situations. However, there is little information available on the role of illumination--collection geometry to guide the design of these components. Therefore we used a Monte Carlo model to investigate the effect of multifiber probe design parameters--numerical aperture, fiber diameter, source--collection fiber separation distance, and fiber-tissue spacer thickness--on light propagation and the origin of detected fluorescence. An excitation wavelength of 400 nm and an emission wavelength of 630 nm were simulated. Noteworthy effects included an increase in axial selectivity with decreasing fiber size and a transition with increasing fiber-tissue spacer size from a subsurface peak in fluorophore sensitivity to a nearly monotonic decrease typical of single-fiber probes. We provide theoretical evidence that probe design strongly affects tissue interrogation. Therefore application-specific customization of probe design may lead to improvements in the efficacy of fluorescence-based diagnostic devices.


Optics Letters | 2003

Selective detection of fluorophore layers in turbid media: the role of fiber-optic probe design.

T. Joshua Pfefer; L. Stephanie Matchette; Amanda M. Ross; M. N. Ediger

Experimental verification of the ability to alter the sensitivity to fluorophore layers in turbid media by varying illumination-collection geometry is presented. Fiber-optic probes and two-layer, fluorophore-doped, turbid phantoms are used to elucidate the roles of spot size, illumination-collection fiber separation, and probe-sample spacing. Variations in single- and multiple-fiber probe design parameters produce significant changes in the relative sensitivity to sample layers in a manner that agrees with prior computational studies.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2003

Reflectance-based determination of optical properties in highly attenuating tissue

T. Joshua Pfefer; L. Stephanie Matchette; Carrie L. Bennett; Jessica A. Gall; Joy A. Wilke; Anthony J. Durkin; M. N. Ediger

Accurate data on in vivo tissue optical properties in the ultraviolet A (UVA) to visible (VIS) range are needed to elucidate light propagation effects and to aid in identifying safe exposure limits for biomedical optical spectroscopy. We have performed a preliminary study toward the development of a diffuse reflectance system with maximum fiber separation distance of less than 2.5 mm. The ultimate objective is to perform endoscopic measurement of optical properties in the UVA to VIS. Optical property sets with uniformly and randomly distributed values were developed within the range of interest: absorption coefficients from 1 to 25 cm(-1) and reduced scattering coefficients from 5 to 25 cm(-1). Reflectance datasets were generated by direct measurement of Intralipid-dye tissue phantoms at lambda=675 nm and Monte Carlo simulation of light propagation. Multivariate calibration models were generated using feed-forward artificial neural network or partial least squares algorithms. Models were calibrated and evaluated using simulated or measured reflectance datasets. The most accurate models developed-those based on a neural network and uniform optical property intervals-were able to determine absorption and reduced scattering coefficients with root mean square errors of +/-2 and +/-3 cm(-1), respectively. Measurements of ex vivo bovine liver at 543 and 633 nm were within 5 to 30% of values reported in the literature. While our technique for determination of optical properties appears feasible and moderately accurate, enhanced accuracy may be achieved through modification of the experimental system and processing algorithms.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1997

Laser–Tissue Interaction During Transmyocardial Laser Revascularization

E. Duco Jansen; Martin Frenz; Kamuran A. Kadipasaoglu; T. Joshua Pfefer; Hans Jörg Altermatt; Massoud Motamedi; Ashley J. Welch

BACKGROUND The clinical procedure known as transmyocardial revascularization has recently seen its renaissance. Despite the promising preliminary clinical results, the associated mechanisms are subject to much discussion. This study is an attempt to unravel the basics of the interaction between 800-W CO2 laser radiation and biological tissue. METHODS Time-resolved flash photography was used to visualize the laser-induced channel formation in water and in vitro porcine myocardium. In addition, laser-induced pressures were measured. Light microscopy and birefringence microscopy were used to assess the histologic characteristics of laser-induced thermal damage. RESULTS The channel depth increased logarithmically with time (ie, with pulse duration) in water and porcine myocardium. Pressure measurements showed the occurrence of numerous small transients during the laser pulse, which corresponded with channel formation, as well as local and partial channel collapse during the laser pulse. Twenty millimeters of myocardium was perforated in 25 ms. Increasing the pulse duration had a small effect on the maximum transversable thickness, but histologic analysis showed that thermal damage around the crater increased with increasing pulse duration. CONCLUSIONS Several basic aspects of the interaction of high-power CO2 laser radiation with myocardial tissue and tissue phantoms were studied in vitro. Although the goal of this study was not to unravel the mechanisms responsible for the beneficial effects of transmyocardial revascularization, it provided important information on the process of channel formation and collapse and tissue damage.


Journal of Endourology | 2001

A perspective on laser lithotripsy: the fragmentation processes

Kin F. Chan; T. Joshua Pfefer; Joel M.H. Teichman; Ashley J. Welch

This paper describes in simple terms the physics of laser-calculus interactions and introduces a method with which physicians can understand or evaluate the application of any new laser technique for use in lithotripsy or other medical fields. Tissue optical properties and laser parameters govern the mechanism(s) of fragmentation of urinary or biliary calculi. Laser pulse energies for clinical lithotripsy range from Q0 = 20 mJ to 2 J for short-pulsed lasers to long-pulsed lasers, respectively. Lasers with short pulse durations (i.e., less than a few microseconds) fragment calculi by means of shockwaves following optical breakdown and plasma expansion of ionized water or calculus compositions or by cavitation collapse, thus manifesting a photoacoustical effect. Laser-tissue interactions involving dominant photomechanical or photoacoustical effects are usually stress confined. Long-pulsed lasers (i.e., >100 microsec), on the other hand, generate minimal acoustic waves, and calculi are fragmented by temperatures beyond the thresholds for vaporization of calculus constituents, melting, or chemical decomposition.


Lasers in Surgery and Medicine | 2000

Bioheat transfer analysis of cryogen spray cooling during laser treatment of port wine stains

T. Joshua Pfefer; Derek J. Smithies; Thomas E. Milner; Martin J. C. van Gemert; J. Stuart Nelson; Ashley J. Welch

The thermal response of port wine stain (PWS) skin to a combined treatment of pulsed laser irradiation and cryogen spray cooling (CSC) was analyzed through a series of simulations performed with a novel optical‐thermal model that incorporates realistic tissue morphology.


Journal of Biomechanical Engineering-transactions of The Asme | 1999

Pulsed Laser-Induced Thermal Damage in Whole Blood

T. Joshua Pfefer; Bernard Choi; Gracie Vargas; Karen M. McNally; Ashley J. Welch

An investigation of the effects of laser irradiation with a wavelength of 532 nm and pulse duration of 10 ms on whole blood was performed in vitro. Threshold radiant exposures for coagulation were quantified and transient radiometric temperatures were measured. The progression of effects with increasing radiant exposure--from evaporation to coagulation-induced light scattering to aggregated coagulum formation to ablation--is described. Results indicate that coagulation and ablation occur at temperatures significantly in excess of those assumed in previous theoretical studies. An Arrhenius rate process analysis based on hemoglobin data indicates good agreement with experimental results.


Lasers in Surgery and Medicine | 1999

Modeling laser treatment of port wine stains with a computer- reconstructed biopsy

T. Joshua Pfefer; Jennifer K. Barton; Derek J. Smithies; Thomas E. Milner; J. Stuart Nelson; Martin J. C. van Gemert; Ashley J. Welch

The efficacy of laser treatment of port wine stains (PWS) has been shown to be highly dependent on patient‐specific vasculature. The effect of tissue structure on optical and thermal mechanisms was investigated for different pulse durations by using a novel theoretical model that incorporates tissue morphology reconstructed tomographically from a PWS biopsy.

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Ashley J. Welch

University of Texas at Austin

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Anant Agrawal

Food and Drug Administration

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Quanzeng Wang

Food and Drug Administration

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William C. Vogt

Center for Devices and Radiological Health

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Kin F. Chan

University of Texas at Austin

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Jianting Wang

Food and Drug Administration

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Pejhman Ghassemi

Food and Drug Administration

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Brian S. Garra

Food and Drug Administration

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