Toenails can get gnarly. But lasers can vaporize any organic matter. The LTA device fits over the toe and holds it steady. One laser assesses viability of tissue via reflectance: normal well perfused tissue will reflect the laser at a given frequency (like a pulse oximeter). If not viable (and therefore toenail, or possibly callus/wart) there is a burst o flaser energy to that spot. A vacuum sucks air thru the LTA, cooling the toe and removing vapor.
Iterative ablation yields a baby smooth and well groomed toe!-- bungston, Aug 24 2010 Laser toenail fungus http://www.google.c...&q=laser+toe+fungusA popular ad on local radio shills one of these [csea, Aug 25 2010] // Iterative ablation //
That sounds so clinical and precise ... can we use it ? It sounds so much better than "Keep blasting away until you hit something expensive".-- 8th of 7, Aug 24 2010 Could we program it to sculpt the nails a bit?-- baconbrain, Aug 24 2010 Can the vapour be captured and used to punish juvenile miscreants?-- xenzag, Aug 24 2010 By casting voodoo spells on them?-- baconbrain, Aug 24 2010 Pulse oximeter doesn't reflect, it transmits. But that's just pedantry, the underlying logic isn't affected.
More germane quibbles:
1) Would keratin vaporize, or would it burn? You need it to vaporize, I think, so it wafts away on the breeze. If it burns, you'll deposit smouldering black crud on the nailbed, won't you? 2) Heat transmission through the as-yet-unvaporized nail to the nailbed. If there's too much of that, this'll be painful. If keratin actually does vaporize , that'll help with this.
A more modest version would skip the "callus/wart" and "baby smooth" part, and just cut the toenail, using machine vision to detect the line where the nail juts out beyond the nailbed.-- mouseposture, Aug 24 2010 /Heat/ yes. This is why small laser pulses are used with breeze in between. Water might carry away heat even better and would not be difficult.
/where the nail juts out beyond the nailbed./ This needs to also ablate those gnarled and fungus-infested nails that are higher than they are long.
The callus/wart piece was from our PR people. Strictly nail it is.-- bungston, Aug 25 2010 random, halfbakery