In vivo optophysiology in rodent eyes using phase-sensitive optical coherence tomography

Recently, there has been vast interest in probing photoreceptor dynamics using optical coherence tomography (OCT). Most successful demonstrations implemented adaptive optics or digital adaptive optics to resolve individual cones or rods in human subjects. Here we use phase information to trace the p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors Tan, Bingyao, Li, Huakun, Barathi, Veluchamy Amutha, Schmetterer, Leopold, Ling, Tong
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published SPIE 11.08.2023
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ISBN9781510664739
1510664734
ISSN0277-786X
DOI10.1117/12.2672175

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Summary:Recently, there has been vast interest in probing photoreceptor dynamics using optical coherence tomography (OCT). Most successful demonstrations implemented adaptive optics or digital adaptive optics to resolve individual cones or rods in human subjects. Here we use phase information to trace the photoreceptor response in rodents using an ultrahigh-resolution, phase-sensitive, spectral-domain OCT. Brown Norway rats (six to 14 weeks) were sedated using a ketamine and xylazine cocktail. Repeated scans were registered by a phase-restoring subpixel motion correction algorithm to isolate the bulk motion, and two hyperreflective bands (inner segment/outer segment junction – IS/OS; outer segment tip + retinal pigment epithelium + Bruch's membrane) were segmented automatically. As a result, two types of nanoscale signals (biphasic Type-I and monophasic Type-II) were detected with a clear separation in depth. We tested the repeatability, scotopic stimulus strength dependency, and photopic background intensity dependency. Besides, we demonstrated enface mapping of the ORG signals in a wide field of 20°, analogous to the multifocal electroretinogram but with a much higher resolution, revealing the spatial distribution of the outer retina function. This method could be extended to study animal models with photoreceptor degeneration and clinical studies to investigate early photoreceptor dysfunction with high spatiotemporal resolution.
Bibliography:Conference Location: Munich, Germany
Conference Date: 2023-06-25|2023-06-30
ISBN:9781510664739
1510664734
ISSN:0277-786X
DOI:10.1117/12.2672175