Guoji Yanke Zazhi (Jun 2022)

Ocular images for neurodegenerative disease analysis

  • Ao-Wang Qiu,
  • Qiu-Zhuo Xu,
  • Chen-Feng Gu,
  • Ze-Tian Zhang,
  • Yue-Xuan Wang,
  • Xiao-Yan Ke,
  • Qiang Chen,
  • Wei-Wei Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3980/j.issn.1672-5123.2022.6.11
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 6
pp. 941 – 945

Abstract

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Retina and optic nerve both originate in brain, therefore they have the similar structure and functional characteristics of the brain. Exploring the performance of the central optic nervous disorder on the retina will be beneficial to uncovering the interaction mechanism between brain and eye. As an extension of the central nervous system, the retina contains ganglion cell, a special neuron, whose axon form the optic nerve and has access into the central nervous system. Therefore, the retina can be used as a mirror reflecting neurodegenerative diseases structurally and functionally. With the development of imaging technology, optical coherence tomography(angiography)has become the mainstream tool for ophthalmological clinical diagnosis due to its easy operation and low cost. In recent years, discovering biomarkers of neurodegenerative diseases, especially Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis and so on, in the retinal optical coherence tomography images has gradually become an emerging research direction. In this review, we summarized the research progress of neurodegenerative diseases analysis based on the retinal images in the past decade, and provide a prospect to inspire further research as far as possible.

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