We present measurements of total retinal blood flow in healthy volunteers using a three beam Doppler optical coherence tomography (D-OCT) technique. This technology has the advantage of a precise determination of the flow vector without the use of any a-priori information on the vessel geometry. Circular D-OCT scans around the optic disc were recorded and venous as well as arterial total blood flow was determined and compared for each subject. The reproducibility of the method was assessed in 6 subjects by repeated measurements. Only small deviations of around 6% between the measurements were found which indicates the high precision of the proposed method. Werkmeister, "Blood flow velocity vector field reconstruction from dual-beam bidirectional Doppler OCT measurements in retinal veins," Biomed. Opt. Express 6(5), 1599-1615 (2015). 38. C. E. Riva, J. E. Grunwald, S. H. Sinclair, and B. L. Petrig, "Blood velocity and volumetric flow rate in human retinal vessels," Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 26(8), 1124-1132 (1985). 39. J. P. Garcia, Jr., P. T. Garcia, and R. B. Rosen, "Retinal blood flow in the normal human eye using the canon laser blood flowmeter," Ophthalmic Res. 34(5), 295-299 (2002
We developed a three-beam Doppler optical coherence tomography (OCT) system that enables measurement of the velocity vector of moving particles in three-dimensions (3-D). The spatial orientation as well as the magnitude of motion can be determined without prior knowledge of the geometry of motion. The system combines three spectral-domain OCT interferometers whose sample beams are focused at the sample by a common focusing lens at three different angles. This provides three spatially independent velocity components simultaneously from which the velocity vector can be reconstructed. We demonstrate the system in a simple test object (rotating disc), a flow phantom, and for blood flow measurements in the retina of a healthy human subject. Measurements of blood flow at a venous bifurcation achieve a good agreement between in- and outflow and demonstrate the reliability of the method.
We present a novel spectral domain polarization sensitive OCT system (PS-OCT) that operates at an
A-scan rate of 70 kHz and supports scan angles of up to 40° × 40°. The
high-speed imaging allows the acquisition of up to 1024 × 250 A-scans per 3D scan, which,
together with the large field of view, considerably increases the informative value of the images.
To demonstrate the excellent performance of the new PS-OCT system, we imaged several healthy
volunteers and patients with various diseases such as glaucoma, AMD, Stargardt’s disease, and
albinism. The results are compared with clinically established methods such as scanning laser
polarimetry and autofluorescence.
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