Vision Pan-America (Oct 2015)

High resolution adaptive optics imaging complements standard spectral domain optical coherent tomography in retinal diseases with micro-structural details: a case series

  • Gibran Syed Khurshid,
  • Sasha Strul,
  • Adam Boretsky,
  • Massoud Motamedi,
  • Praveena Gupta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15324/vpa.v14i4.261
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
pp. 108 – 109

Abstract

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Purpose: To evaluate if high resolution adaptive optics confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (AO-SLO) can be used as an adjunct complementary diagnostic tool to spectral domain optical coherent tomography (SD-OCT) in characterizing three macular diseases: rod-cone dystrophy, acute retinal pigment epitheliitis (Krill’s disease), and occult macular dystrophy. Methods: As part of a complete clinical examination, each patient was subjected to color fundus pictures, multimodal imaging scans with Heidelberg SpectralisTM and high resolution retinal images with a custom built adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmolscope (AO-SLO). The registered AO-SLO images were averaged to improve the signal to noise ratio and used to generate larger photoreceptor mosaics. Results: AO-SLO mosaics for all three conditions showed distinct, characteristic disruptions of the photoreceptors in areas that corresponded to the abnormalities observed on fundus photography and SD-OCT scans. Conclusions: AO-SLO defined fine structural changes associated with retinal pathology at the photoreceptor level that could not be achieved using standard diagnostic methods. A combination of adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (AO-SLO) and SD-OCT provided views of the retina with enhanced lateral and axial resolution. High-resolution, ultra-structural details of the retina may provide additional insights into the disease etiology, progression and management of patients with vision threatening macular diseases.

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