Paper
18 August 2014 Dynamic measurement of the corneal tear film with a Twyman-Green interferometer
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Abstract
An interferometer for measuring dynamic properties of the in vivo tear film on the human cornea has been developed. The system is a near-infrared instantaneous phase-shifting Twyman-Green interferometer. The laser source is a 785 nm solidstate laser; the system has been carefully designed and calibrated to ensure that the system operates at eye safe levels. Measurements are made over a 6 mm diameter on the cornea. Successive frames of interferometric height measurements are combined to produce movies showing both the quantitative and qualitative changes in the topography of the tear film surface and structure. To date, measurement periods of up to 120 seconds at 28.6 frames per second have been obtained. Several human subjects have been examined using this system, demonstrating a surface height resolution of 25 nm and spatial resolution of 6 μm. Examples of features that have been observed in these in preliminary studies of the tear film include: post-blink disruption, evolution, and stabilization of the tear film; tear film artifacts generated by blinking; tear film evaporation and break-up; and the propagation of foreign objects in the tear film. This paper discusses the interferometer design and presents results from in vivo measurements.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jason D. Micali, John E. Greivenkamp, and Brian C. Primeau "Dynamic measurement of the corneal tear film with a Twyman-Green interferometer", Proc. SPIE 9204, Interferometry XVII: Advanced Applications, 920406 (18 August 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2064431
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CITATIONS
Cited by 13 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Interferometers

Eye

Video

Cornea

In vivo imaging

Interferometry

Spatial resolution

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