WIDE-FIELD SWEPT-SOURCE OCT AND METHOD FOR MOVING OBJECTS

A wide-field swept-source OCT method for imaging a moving object (14), in particular the anterior chamber (16) of the human eye, is described, the method including the following steps: - providing wavelength-tuned illumination radiation (B) having individual illumination pulses (10.L0, 10.L1) of dif...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Hauptverfasser: SEIDEL, Dirk, BUBLITZ, Daniel
Format: Patent
Sprache:eng ; fre ; ger
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext bestellen
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:A wide-field swept-source OCT method for imaging a moving object (14), in particular the anterior chamber (16) of the human eye, is described, the method including the following steps: - providing wavelength-tuned illumination radiation (B) having individual illumination pulses (10.L0, 10.L1) of different centroid wavelengths, - illuminating the object (14) using the illumination radiation (B) and imaging the object (14) on a 2-D detector (22) which has an image recording cycle of exposure intervals (4.1, 4.2, 4.3, 4.4) and read-out intervals (6.1, 6.2, 6.3), - emitting the illumination pulses (10.L0, 10.L1, 10.L2) as a series of illumination pulse pairs (10.L0, 10.L1; 10.L0, 10.L2) of a first illumination pulse (10.L0) and a second illumination pulse (10.L1, 10.L2), with illumination pulses (10.L0) with the same centroid wavelengths being repeated at least once over the illumination pulse pairs (10.L0, 10.L1; 10.L0, 10.L2), - synchronizing the illumination pulses (10.L0, 10.L1, 10.L2) and the detector (22) such that the illumination pulse pairs (10.L0, 10.L1; 10.L0, 10.L2) are grouped around every second (6.1, 6.3) of the read-out intervals (6.1, 6.2, 6.3) of the sequence (2), and - generating image pairs from the detector signals corresponding to the illumination pulse pairs (10.L0, 10.L1; 10.L0, 10.L2), - determining changes between the image data of the illumination pulses (10.L0) with the same centroid wavelength repeated over the illumination pulse pairs (10.L0, 10.L1; 10.L0, 10.L2) and using the changes to correct movements of the object (14) in the image data.