Portable boom-type ultrahigh-resolution OCT with an integrated imaging probe for supine position retinal imaging

To expand the clinical applications and improve the ease of use of ultrahigh-resolution optical coherence tomography (UHR-OCT), we developed a portable boom-type ophthalmic UHR-OCT operating in supine position that can be used for pediatric subjects, bedridden patients and perioperative conditions....

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomedical optics express 2022-06, Vol.13 (6), p.3295-3310
Hauptverfasser: Duan, Zhengyu, Huang, Kai, Luo, Zhongzhou, Ma, Ke, Wang, Gengyuan, Hu, Xiaodong, Zhang, Jinze, Luo, Xiaoling, Huang, Yuancong, Liu, Gangjun, Ding, Xiaoyan, Xiao, Peng, Yuan, Jin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To expand the clinical applications and improve the ease of use of ultrahigh-resolution optical coherence tomography (UHR-OCT), we developed a portable boom-type ophthalmic UHR-OCT operating in supine position that can be used for pediatric subjects, bedridden patients and perioperative conditions. By integrating the OCT sample arm probe with real-time iris display and automatic focusing electric lens for easy alignment, coupling the probe on a self-locking multi-directional manipulator to reduce motion artifacts and operator fatigue, and installing the OCT module on a moveable cart for system mobility, our customized portable boom-type UHR-OCT enables non-contact, high-resolution and high-stability retinal examinations to be performed on subjects in supine position. The spectral-domain UHR-OCT operates at a wavelength of 845 nm with 130 nm FWHM (full width at half maximum) bandwidth, achieving an axial resolution of ≈2.3µm in tissue with an A-line acquisition rate up to 128 kHz. A high-definition two-dimensional (2D) raster protocol was used for high-quality cross-sectional imaging while a cube volume three-dimensional (3D) scan was used for three-dimensional imaging and reconstruction, resolving major layer structures of the retina. The feasibility of the system was demonstrated by performing supine position 2D/3D retinal imaging on healthy human subjects, sedated infants, and non-sedated awake neonates.
ISSN:2156-7085
2156-7085
DOI:10.1364/BOE.456435