Proceedings Article10.1117/12.2079665
Automatic optimization high-speed high-resolution OCT retinal imaging at 1μm
Michelle Cua,Xiyun Liu,Dongkai Miao,Sujin Lee,Sieun Lee,Stefano Bonora,Robert J. Zawadzki,Paul J. Mackenzie,Yifan Jian,Marinko V. Sarunic +9 more
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TL;DR: A focus-stacking optical coherence tomography (OCT) system with automatic optimization for high-resolution, extended-focal-range clinical retinal imaging and extracted clinically-relevant parameters such as the nerve fiber layer thickness and lamina cribrosa microarchitecture is presented.
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Abstract: High-resolution OCT retinal imaging is important in providing visualization of various retinal structures to aid
researchers in better understanding the pathogenesis of vision-robbing diseases. However, conventional optical
coherence tomography (OCT) systems have a trade-off between lateral resolution and depth-of-focus. In this report, we
present the development of a focus-stacking optical coherence tomography (OCT) system with automatic optimization
for high-resolution, extended-focal-range clinical retinal imaging. A variable-focus liquid lens was added to correct for
de-focus in real-time. A GPU-accelerated segmentation and optimization was used to provide real-time layer-specific enface
visualization as well as depth-specific focus adjustment. After optimization, multiple volumes focused at different
depths were acquired, registered, and stitched together to yield a single, high-resolution focus-stacked dataset. Using this
system, we show high-resolution images of the ONH, from which we extracted clinically-relevant parameters such as the
nerve fiber layer thickness and lamina cribrosa microarchitecture.
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Citations
Adaptive optics OCT using 1060nm swept source and dual deformable lenses for human retinal imaging
Yifan Jian,Sujin Lee,Michelle Cua,Dongkai Miao,Stefano Bonora,Robert J. Zawadzki,Marinko V. Sarunic +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, a wavefront sensorless adaptive optics (WSAO) 1060nm swept source OCT human retinal imaging system with dual deformable lenses is presented, and retinal images acquired in vivo from research volunteers.
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