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Live video rate volumetric OCT imaging of the retina with multi-MHz A-scan rates

Surgical microscopes are vital tools for ophthalmic surgeons. The recent development of an integrated OCT system for the first time allows to look at tissue features below the surface. Hence, these systems can drastically improve the quality and reduce the risk of surgical interventions. However, cu...

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Autores principales: Kolb, Jan Philip, Draxinger, Wolfgang, Klee, Julian, Pfeiffer, Tom, Eibl, Matthias, Klein, Thomas, Wieser, Wolfgang, Huber, Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6438632/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30921342
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213144
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author Kolb, Jan Philip
Draxinger, Wolfgang
Klee, Julian
Pfeiffer, Tom
Eibl, Matthias
Klein, Thomas
Wieser, Wolfgang
Huber, Robert
author_facet Kolb, Jan Philip
Draxinger, Wolfgang
Klee, Julian
Pfeiffer, Tom
Eibl, Matthias
Klein, Thomas
Wieser, Wolfgang
Huber, Robert
author_sort Kolb, Jan Philip
collection PubMed
description Surgical microscopes are vital tools for ophthalmic surgeons. The recent development of an integrated OCT system for the first time allows to look at tissue features below the surface. Hence, these systems can drastically improve the quality and reduce the risk of surgical interventions. However, current commercial OCT-enhanced ophthalmic surgical microscopes provide only one additional cross sectional view to the standard microscope image and feature a low update rate. To present volumetric data at a high update rate, much faster OCT systems than the ones applied in today’s surgical microscopes need to be developed. We demonstrate live volumetric retinal OCT imaging, which may provide a sufficiently large volume size (330x330x595 Voxel) and high update frequency (24.2 Hz) such that the surgeon may even purely rely on the OCT for certain surgical maneuvers. It represents a major technological step towards the possible application of OCT-only surgical microscopes in the future which would be much more compact thus enabling many additional minimal invasive applications. We show that multi-MHz A-scan rates are essential for such a device. Additionally, advanced phase-based OCT techniques require 3D OCT volumes to be detected with a stable optical phase. These techniques can provide additional functional information of the retina. Up to now, classical OCT was to slow for this, so our system can pave the way to holographic OCT with a traditional confocal flying spot approach. For the first time, we present point scanning volumetric OCT imaging of the posterior eye with up to 191.2 Hz volume rate. We show that this volume rate is high enough to enable a sufficiently stable optical phase to a level, where remaining phase errors can be corrected. Applying advanced post processing concepts for numerical refocusing or computational adaptive optics should be possible in future with such a system.
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spelling pubmed-64386322019-04-12 Live video rate volumetric OCT imaging of the retina with multi-MHz A-scan rates Kolb, Jan Philip Draxinger, Wolfgang Klee, Julian Pfeiffer, Tom Eibl, Matthias Klein, Thomas Wieser, Wolfgang Huber, Robert PLoS One Research Article Surgical microscopes are vital tools for ophthalmic surgeons. The recent development of an integrated OCT system for the first time allows to look at tissue features below the surface. Hence, these systems can drastically improve the quality and reduce the risk of surgical interventions. However, current commercial OCT-enhanced ophthalmic surgical microscopes provide only one additional cross sectional view to the standard microscope image and feature a low update rate. To present volumetric data at a high update rate, much faster OCT systems than the ones applied in today’s surgical microscopes need to be developed. We demonstrate live volumetric retinal OCT imaging, which may provide a sufficiently large volume size (330x330x595 Voxel) and high update frequency (24.2 Hz) such that the surgeon may even purely rely on the OCT for certain surgical maneuvers. It represents a major technological step towards the possible application of OCT-only surgical microscopes in the future which would be much more compact thus enabling many additional minimal invasive applications. We show that multi-MHz A-scan rates are essential for such a device. Additionally, advanced phase-based OCT techniques require 3D OCT volumes to be detected with a stable optical phase. These techniques can provide additional functional information of the retina. Up to now, classical OCT was to slow for this, so our system can pave the way to holographic OCT with a traditional confocal flying spot approach. For the first time, we present point scanning volumetric OCT imaging of the posterior eye with up to 191.2 Hz volume rate. We show that this volume rate is high enough to enable a sufficiently stable optical phase to a level, where remaining phase errors can be corrected. Applying advanced post processing concepts for numerical refocusing or computational adaptive optics should be possible in future with such a system. Public Library of Science 2019-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC6438632/ /pubmed/30921342 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213144 Text en © 2019 Kolb et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kolb, Jan Philip
Draxinger, Wolfgang
Klee, Julian
Pfeiffer, Tom
Eibl, Matthias
Klein, Thomas
Wieser, Wolfgang
Huber, Robert
Live video rate volumetric OCT imaging of the retina with multi-MHz A-scan rates
title Live video rate volumetric OCT imaging of the retina with multi-MHz A-scan rates
title_full Live video rate volumetric OCT imaging of the retina with multi-MHz A-scan rates
title_fullStr Live video rate volumetric OCT imaging of the retina with multi-MHz A-scan rates
title_full_unstemmed Live video rate volumetric OCT imaging of the retina with multi-MHz A-scan rates
title_short Live video rate volumetric OCT imaging of the retina with multi-MHz A-scan rates
title_sort live video rate volumetric oct imaging of the retina with multi-mhz a-scan rates
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6438632/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30921342
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213144
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