Presentation
13 March 2019 Handheld OCT-A using spectrally encoded coherence tomography and reflectometry (Conference Presentation)
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 10858, Ophthalmic Technologies XXIX; 108580Z (2019) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2510340
Event: SPIE BiOS, 2019, San Francisco, California, United States
Abstract
Optical coherence tomographic angiography (OCT-A) technologies have been primarily demonstrated on slit-lamp systems, which preclude imaging in infants, bedridden patients, or patients who are otherwise unable to be imaged upright. Current-generation OCT-A requires densely-sampled volumetric datasets for high vascular resolution imaging, but bulk motion artifacts, resulting from saccades or eye drifts, often distort anatomic features during long acquisitions. Here, we demonstrate handheld motion-artifact corrected OCT-A using spectrally encoded coherence tomography and reflectometry (SECTR). SECTR has advantageous over previously demonstrated handheld ophthalmic imagers by acquiring spatiotemporally co-registered, high-speed en face images of the retinal fundus using spectrally encoded reflectometry (SER) concurrently with OCT. The orthogonal priority acquisition axes of SER and OCT enables volumetric registration and motion-artifact compensation. We have incorporated several optomechanical improvements including novel snap-fit lens mounts for reduced size and weight and improved optical stability over our previous design. Additionally, we developed a method for reducing back reflections from a double-clad fiber by fusion-splicing a no-core fiber segment with a predefined geometry. Lastly, we demonstrate in vivo human OCT-A imaging of the optic nerve head and fovea. OCT and OCT-A images were motion-corrected using complementary motion information extracted from en face SER and cross-sectional OCT images. Here, OCT-A volumetric datasets were densely-sampled in small regions-of-interest within a large SER field-of-view to achieve high vascular resolution OCT-A while maintaining sufficient fiducials within SER images for motion registration. We believe our probe will enable point-of-care functional ophthalmic imaging.
Conference Presentation
© (2019) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Joseph D. Malone, Mohamed T. El-Haddad, and Yuankai Tao "Handheld OCT-A using spectrally encoded coherence tomography and reflectometry (Conference Presentation)", Proc. SPIE 10858, Ophthalmic Technologies XXIX, 108580Z (13 March 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2510340
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KEYWORDS
Reflectometry

Optical coherence tomography

Tomography

Imaging systems

Lens design

Ophthalmic imaging

Retinal scanning

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