Diagnostics (Jul 2024)

Compact Linear Flow Phantom Model for Retinal Blood-Flow Evaluation

  • Achyut J. Raghavendra,
  • Abdelrahman M. Elhusseiny,
  • Anant Agrawal,
  • Zhuolin Liu,
  • Daniel X. Hammer,
  • Osamah J. Saeedi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14151615
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 15
p. 1615

Abstract

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Impaired retinal blood flow is associated with ocular diseases such as glaucoma, macular degeneration, and diabetic retinopathy. Among several ocular imaging techniques developed to measure retinal blood flow both invasively and non-invasively, adaptive optics (AO)-enabled scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (AO-SLO) resolves individual red blood cells and provides a high resolution with which to measure flow across retinal microvasculature. However, cross-validation of flow measures remains a challenge owing to instrument and patient-specific variability in each imaging technique. Hence, there is a critical need for a well-controlled clinical flow phantom for standardization and to establish blood-flow measures as clinical biomarkers for early diagnosis. Here, we present the design and validation of a simple, compact, portable, linear flow phantom based on a direct current motor and a conveyor-belt system that provides linear velocity tuning within the retinal microvasculature range (0.5–7 mm/s). The model was evaluated using a sensitive AO-SLO line-scan technique, which showed a r2 > 0.997). This model has great potential to calibrate, evaluate, and improve the accuracy of existing clinical imaging systems for retinal blood flow and aid in the diagnosis of ocular diseases with abnormal blood flow.

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