Publication | Open Access
Wide-field optical coherence tomography angiography enabled by two repeated measurements of B-scans
39
Citations
16
References
2016
Year
EngineeringAdvanced ImagingBiomedical EngineeringRetinaVascular ImagingComputational ImagingAcceptable Image QualityQuantitative MetricsMolecular ImagingRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingVascular ImageMedical ImagingOphthalmologyMedicineMedical Image ComputingRepeated MeasurementsOcular TissueDigital Subtraction AngiographyOptical ImagingSkin OpticsExperimental OphthalmologyBiomedical ImagingOptical Coherence TomographyGlaucomaImagingImage QualityTomography
Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) has increasingly become clinically important, particularly in ophthalmology. However, the field of view (FOV) for current OCTA imaging is severely limited due to A-scan rates that can be afforded by current clinical systems and, more importantly, the requirement of a repeated scanning protocol. This Letter evaluates the possibility of using only two repeated B-scans for OCTA for the purpose of an increased FOV. The effect of repeated numbers on the OCTA result is discussed through experiments on an animal model in vivo and evaluated using quantitative metrics for image quality. Demonstrated through in vivo imaging of a pathological human eye, we show that optical microangiography-based OCTA with two repeated B-scans can provide wide-field angiography up to 12×12 mm with clinically acceptable image quality.
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