Retinal imaging with polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography and adaptive optics
Source: Opt. Express 17, 21634 (2010); doi:10.1364/OE.17.021634
Issue Date: 15 February 2010
KEYWORDS and PACS
adaptive optics,
eye,
medicine,
physiology,
vision,
optical tomography,
coherence,
biomedical imaging,
medicine,
optical images,
bio-optics,
patient diagnosis,
vision,
testing
- 42.68.Wt
Remote sensing; LIDAR and adaptive systems (atmospheric optics) - 87.85.Ox
Biomedical instrumentation and transducers - 42.66.-p
Physiological optics - 87.57.Q-
Computed tomography (medical imaging) - 87.63.-d
Medical non-ionizing radiation equipment and techniques - 42.25.Kb
Optical coherence - 87.63.L-
Visual medical imaging - YEAR: 2009
PUBLICATION DATA
Various layers of the retina are well known to alter the polarization state of light. Such changes in polarization may be a sensitive indicator of tissue structure and function, and as such have gained increased clinical attention. Here we demonstrate a polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography (PS-OCT) system that incorporates adaptive optics (AO) in the sample arm and a single line scan camera in the detection arm. We quantify the benefit of AO for PS-OCT in terms of signal-to-noise, lateral resolution, and speckle size. Double pass phase retardation per unit depth values ranging from 0.25°/µm to 0.65°/µm were found in the birefringent nerve fiber layer at 6° eccentricity, superior to the fovea, with the highest values being noticeably higher than previously reported with PS-OCT around the optic nerve head. Moreover, fast axis orientation and degree of polarization uniformity measurements made with AO-PS-OCT demonstrate polarization scrambling in the retinal pigment epithelium at the highest resolution reported to date.
©2009 Optical Society of America
(As supplied by publisher.)
| Permalink: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.17.021634 |
ADVERTISEMENT


