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ARVO 2015 Annual Meeting Abstracts 533 Adaptive optics and retinal imaging Thursday, May 07, 2015 12:00 PM–1:45 PM 702/704/706 Paper Session Program #/Board # Range: 5883–5889 Organizing Section: Visual Psychophysics / Physiological Optics Program Number: 5883 Presentation Time: 12:00 PM–12:15 PM Imaging the retinal pigment epithelium mosaic with AO-OCT Zhuolin Liu, Omer P. Kocaoglu, Tim L. Turner, Donald T. Miller. School of Optometry, Indiana university, Bloomington, IN. Purpose: The retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) is critical for support and maintenance of photoreceptors. While dysfunction of the RPE underlies numerous retinal pathologies, biomarkers sensitive to early changes in RPE have been elusive. Because such changes start at cellular level, there has been increased interest in targeting the spatial arrangement and distribution of individual RPE cells. To do so in the living human retina is extremely challenging, owing to the lack of intrinsic contrast of RPE, optical waveguiding by the overlying photoreceptors, and blurring by ocular aberrations. In this study, we take advantage of the micron-level 3D resolution afforded by adaptive optics and optical coherence tomography (AO-OCT) to overcome these obstacles in order to visualize RPE cells and investigate their packing geometry. Methods: Using the Indiana AO-OCT imaging system (λc=790 nm, Δλ=42 nm), volumes of 1°×1° field of view were acquired at 3° and 10° temporal retina in two normal subjects. Volumes were registered, segmented, and RPE en face images extracted. Voronoi analysis was applied to the en face images to determine number of neighbors (NN) and center-to-center nearest neighbor distance (NND) of the RPE cells. 2D power spectra were used to provide additional information about cell spacing. Results: RPE cell mosaics were resolved in both subjects and retinal eccentricities. Voronoi analysis indicates hexagonal cells (with six NN) are most frequent (>50%) at 3° retinal eccentricity and are of lower frequency (<50%) at 10° retinal eccentricity. NND was 11.4±2.2 μm and 12.8±3.0 μm for subject 1 at 3° and 10° retinal eccentricities respectively, and 12.0±2.0 μm for subject 2 at 3°. Processing of 10° data for subject 2 is ongoing. NND measurements are consistent with the 2D power spectra estimations of 11.9 μm and 12.9 μm of subject 1 (3° and 10°), and 12.7 μm of subject 2 (3°). Conclusions: AO-OCT imaging permits visualization and quantification of the RPE packing geometry in the living human retina. Commercial Relationships: Zhuolin Liu, None; Omer P. Kocaoglu, None; Tim L. Turner, None; Donald T. Miller, U.S. Patent 7,364,296 (P) Support: NEI grants 1R01 EY018339 and P30 EY019008. Program Number: 5884 Presentation Time: 12:15 PM–12:30 PM Photoreceptor topography and marked discontinuity at the optic nerve head in young healthy subjects Ann E. Elsner, Joel A. Papay, Christopher A. Clark, Lucie Sawides, Alberto De Castro, Stephen A. Burns. Optometry, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN. Purpose: Individual differences in photoreceptor topography include a higher density of cones in the fovea and different rates of decrease of cone density with increasing eccentricity. We investigated the lack of a smooth change in cone density at the border of and extending into the scleral crescent, where there are no apparent retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells. Methods: To measure cone density at the optic nerve head without the presence of confounding factors such as high myopia or glaucoma, we recruited two subjects < 35 yr with wide scleral crescents despite healthy eyes and low refractive errors. The topography of the scleral crescent was documented with SD-OCT (Spectralis). The hyperreflectivity indicating the lack of melanincontaining RPE cells and the scleral pattern of birefringence were localized with scanning laser polarimetry (GDx). For high resolution imaging at the scleral crescent, a focus series with the Indiana Adaptive Optics Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscope (AOSLO) was used to document the thinned aspect of the scleral crescent and topography change, along with depigmentation. We used the AOSLO to image photoreceptors, the scleral crescent, and the overlying retinal blood vessels. The AOSLO had two channels for imaging photoreceptors via direct backscatter and multiple scattering, using center wavelengths of 785 and 810 nm. We documented cones in the scleral crescent with two operators. Two masked graders counted cones in 6 sampled regions per image, computing cone density with visual angle. Results: Cones density changed markedly near the scleral crescent over RPE cells and within the scleral crescent, where there was no evidence of RPE cells. Patches of higher cone density were found near the scleral crescent, but also regions of low density and even cones that appeared sideways in or near the scleral crescent. The ratio of cone density on and near the edge of scleral crescent to farther away and having RPE cells varied from 0.50 to 1.4 within a single image. In contrast, cones sampled within a single image but nearer to the fovea had more uniform coverage, ranging in density by only .83 to .99. Conclusions: Cone density, known to decrease systematically with increasing distance from the fovea, increases in some patches near the optic nerve head. Cones that are not over RPE cells have irregular densities and sometimes orientations. Commercial Relationships: Ann E. Elsner, None; Joel A. Papay, None; Christopher A. Clark, None; Lucie Sawides, None; Alberto De Castro, None; Stephen A. Burns, None Support: NIH Grants EY007624, EY004395, and P30EY019008 Program Number: 5885 Presentation Time: 12:30 PM–12:45 PM Variability in human cone topography enabled by adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (AOSLO) imaging of foveal centers Tianjiao Zhang2, 1, Christine A. Curcio1, Yuhua Zhang1, 2. 1 Ophthalmology, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL; 2Biomedical Engineering, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL. Purpose: Accurate assessment of variability of the human cone topography is important for interpreting the effects of aging and disease on the photoreceptor mosaic. We measure foveal cone densities to acquire a better estimation of variability between eyes of single individuals and between individuals, using a new generation research AOSLO. Methods: Forty eyes of 20 subjects with normal retinal health aged 19-29 years were studied. The refractive errors of the participants range from -3.0 D to 0.63 D and the fellow eye refractive error difference of individual subject is less than 0.50 D. AOSLO was performed to image the cone photoreceptors. Cone density was assessed on a two-dimensional mesh grid over the central 2.4 mm x 2.4 mm macula at up to 139 points. Mean cone densities, standard deviation, the coefficient of variation (CV), and cumulative cone numbers as a function of eccentricity were calculated to estimate the inter-subject variability. Cone density difference between fellow ©2015, Copyright by the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc., all rights reserved. Go to iovs.org to access the version of record. For permission to reproduce any abstract, contact the ARVO Office at [email protected]. ARVO 2015 Annual Meeting Abstracts eyes was statistically assessed with a mixed model approach and quantified by the root-mean-square (RMS) and the maximum difference. Results: The peak densities of all eyes are 168,162 ± 23,529 cones/ mm2 (mean ± SD) (CV = 0.14). The mean cone density agrees well with the histological data (p = 0.9983 for both eyes). The total number of cones within the cone-dominated foveola is 38,311 ± 2,319 (mean ± SD) (CV = 0.06). The RMS cone density difference between fellow eyes is 6.78%, and the maximum intra-subject difference is 23.6%. There is no difference in the association between eccentricity and cone density in fellow eyes for the superior/nasal (p=0.8503), superior/temporal (p=0.1551), inferior/nasal (p=0.8609), and inferior/temporal (p=0.6662) quadrants of the retina. Conclusions: By measuring the foveal center cone density in a large number of eyes, we were able to determine the center of many retinae, thereby accurately assessing the cone density variability. Our results agree well with data provided by classical histology. We have confirmed that in living human eyes, though cone densities vary significantly in the fovea, the total number of cones within the conedominated foveola is less variant both within and between subjects. Thus, the total number of foveola cones may serve as an important measure for assessing cone loss due to aging or disease. Cone density and total cone counts. Commercial Relationships: Tianjiao Zhang, None; Christine A. Curcio, None; Yuhua Zhang, None Support: This project is funded by EyeSight Foundation of Alabama (YZ), International Retina Research Foundation (YZ), 5R21EY021903 (YZ), and R01EY06109 (CC) and institutional support from Research to Prevent Blindness, EyeSight Foundation of Alabama, Buck Trust of Alabama, and NIH P30 EY003039. Program Number: 5886 Presentation Time: 12:45 PM–1:00 PM Structural properties of the cone photoreceptor packing: Cone spacing and local anisotropy assessed with a cone-averaging method Lucie Sawides, Alberto De Castro, Stephen A. Burns. School of Optometry, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN. Purpose: To rapidly estimate cone spacing properties of the normal cone photoreceptor mosaic and to measure local anisotropies in the hexagonal pattern using a cone-averaging method. Methods: The Indiana high-resolution Adaptive Optics Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscope was used to image the cone photoreceptors of 5 normal healthy subjects (refractive error: -2.25±1.35 D, 28.8 ± 3.4 years old, 0.5% tropicamide dilated pupil). Measurement of cones were recorded while the subjects looked at each corner and the center of a 1 degree imaging field (0.5 Airy disk confocal aperture). In addition four strips of 2x5 degrees of cones corresponding to the four primary meridians (Temporal (T), Nasal (N), Superior (S), Inferior (I)) were recorded using a 2degrees imaging field (and 1.5 Airy disk confocal aperture). Montages of average images were generated using an automated algorithm (combining Matlab, i2k Retina and Adobe Photoshop). Cone spacing properties were analyzed using a custom program that automatically identified individual cones, within a window (50 or 100 microns) that varied with retinal location. Within each window, interior subregions around each cone were extracted and averaged, providing a “kernel” image of an average cone and its surrounding retina. From each kernel image, we measured the averaged cone spacing –computed as the first maximum of the radial profile, then estimated the orientation and spacing anisotropy of the hexagonal patterns based in determining the principle axes of the packing (fig.1). Results: There was a lower averaged cone spacing (higher cone density) along the horizontal (T, N) meridians than along the vertical (S, I) meridians. Locally the cone spacing was lower in vertical than in horizontal axes for all meridians near the fovea (<1°) with horizontal/vertical ratio of: 1.08±0.04 (T), 1.04±0.05 (N), 1.03±0.03 (S) and 1.05±0.01 (I). This tendency was maintained for Temporal and Nasal meridians in the parafovea (up to 5°) while it reversed for Superior meridian (1.11±0.07 (T), 1.10±0.06 (N), 0.97±0.05 (S), 1.00±0.03 (I)). Conclusions: The method allows rapid automated estimates of cone packing properties and provides an analysis of individual difference in cone spacing and local anisotropies of the hexagonal cone array. fig1: Kernel images with axes of the hexagonal packing (one subject, Temporal and Superior meridians from 0.1° to 4° eccentricity) Commercial Relationships: Lucie Sawides, None; Alberto De Castro, None; Stephen A. Burns, None Support: NIH EY04395; P30EY019008 ©2015, Copyright by the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc., all rights reserved. Go to iovs.org to access the version of record. For permission to reproduce any abstract, contact the ARVO Office at [email protected]. ARVO 2015 Annual Meeting Abstracts Program Number: 5887 Presentation Time: 1:00 PM–1:15 PM Magnification Characteristics on Optical Coherence Tomography Systems Dirk-Uwe G. Bartsch. Ophthalmology-Shiley Eye Ctr, Univ of California-San Diego, La Jolla, CA. Purpose: Recent advances in optical coherence tomography (OCT) technology have led to the expansion of this technology into all areas of medicine. A large number of clinical studies have been conducted in areas such as glaucoma, macular degeneration, Alzheimer’s disease, and others. In these studies patients with different refractive errors are studied with different OCT devices using a variety of imaging protocols that measure retinal thickness. Our purpose was to study the lateral and axial magnification characteristics in six different optical coherence tomography devices in a model eye and draw conclusions for clinical studies. Methods: We build an eye model with a simulated retina and an achromatic doublet lens. The axial length of the eye model was adjustable to yield a corresponding defocus of +4D to -10D from emmetropia. We imaged the model eye with six different optical coherence tomographs (CirrusOCT, Optos OCT, Optovue, SpectralisOCT, StratusOCT, and Topcon DRI). We measured the lateral dimension of features on the simulated retina with each instrument. Additionally, we measured the axial dimension of a microscope cover glass. Results: In the first study we analyzed lateral magnification. The SpectralisOCT was the only telecentric imaging system and showed no magnification error with axial length. The Topcon DRI and Optovue showed 12% and 13% variability over the defocus range, respectively. The CirrusOCT and StratusOCT showed 30% variability and the Optos OCT showed 45% variability over the defocus range. In the second study we analyzed axial magnification error. None of the instruments showed any axial magnification error. Conclusions: Optical coherence tomography has dramatically altered retinal imaging and anatomical understanding. Recently, the instruments have been used to collect cross-sectional normative databases in large number of patients. These studies rely on the accuracy of the instrument for different refractive powers and different axial lengths. It appears that several instruments exhibit lateral magnification errors that need to be considered in crosssectional studies. Our studies indicate that none of the instruments exhibit axial magnification error. Commercial Relationships: Dirk-Uwe G. Bartsch, Heidelberg Engineering (R), Heidelberg Engineering (R) Support: NIH grant R01EY016323, NIH grant R01EY016323, NIH grant 1P30EY022589, Research to Prevent Blindness Program Number: 5888 Presentation Time: 1:15 PM–1:30 PM Adaptive optics SLO/OCT for visualizing retinal vasculature Michael Pircher, Franz Felberer, Matthias Rechenmacher, Richard Haindl, Bernhard Baumann, Christoph K. Hitzenberger. Center for Med Pyhs & Biomed Eng, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria. Purpose: To investigate the capability of our previously developed adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscope / optical coherence tomography (AO-SLO/OCT) instrument for visualizing retinal vasculature on a cellular level. Methods: The SLO/OCT instrument records both imaging modalities simultaneously and is operated at frame rates between 10 and 40 fps. The field of view of the system can be varied between 1° x 1° and 4°x4°. The small field of view allows for an optimum adaptive optics correction and high resolution imaging. The larger field of view is used to generate overview images of the retina that enable an easy determination of the imaged location. A typical measurement takes several seconds. The en-face OCT technique provides two different operating modes. In the first mode, a 3D volume scan of the retina is recorded. Since the system is equipped with a dynamic focus scheme, an entirely sharp 3D volume can be recorded. In the second mode, the coherence plane and the focus plane can be set into a layer of interest (such as a layer containing a vessel) and several en-face OCT images of this layer are recorded with high speed. This enables the visualization of dynamic processes such as blood flow and frame averaging (similar to AO-SLO instruments) in order to increase the signal to noise ratio. Axial eye motion is compensated using active axial eye tracking and transverse motion is corrected in a post processing step. Results: Retinal blood flow on a cellular level was visualized using this technology. For larger vessels the coherence gate was set at different locations (anterior vessel wall, center part of vessel, posterior vessel wall) within the tissue enabling the visualization of different structures. The en-face OCT images show subtle details such as individual erythrocytes or vessel walls. Frame averaging enabled the visualization of different blood streams within a vessel. In addition new structures within the surrounding tissue of the vessels were found. Conclusions: The AO-SLO/OCT instrument is well suited to study dynamic processes such as blood flow on a cellular level. The high depth resolution provided by OCT enables a clear separation between different structures of the retina. The overview images and the 3D information that can be recorded by the same instrument allow an exact localization of the imaged region. Commercial Relationships: Michael Pircher, None; Franz Felberer, None; Matthias Rechenmacher, None; Richard Haindl, None; Bernhard Baumann, None; Christoph K. Hitzenberger, None Support: Austrian Science Fund P22329-N02 Program Number: 5889 Presentation Time: 1:30 PM–1:45 PM Structural and Functional Correlation of Retinal Photoreceptors Overlying Lesions in White Dot Syndrome Aniruddha Agarwal1, Mohamed K. Soliman1, 2, Nithya Rajagopalan1, Mostafa S. Hanout1, Mohammad A. Sadiq1, Loren S. Jack1, Salman Sarwar1, Diana V. Do1, Quan Nguyen1, Yasir J. Sepah1. 1 Ophthalmology, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE; 2Ophthalmology, Assiut University, Assiut, Egypt. Purpose: Lesions in white dot syndromes (WDS) may be associated with photoreceptor (PR) loss. A prospective cohort study was performed to evaluate PR density and correlate it with retinal sensitivity overlying lesions in WDS. Methods: Lesions of WDS (≤ 3 chosen/eye), within 5° foveal eccentricity, were imaged using adaptive optics (AO) (rxt1, Imagine Eyes, France), spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SDOCT) and fundus autofluorescence (FAF) (Heidelberg Spectralis®, Germany). In this study, lesions were defined as active if there were presence of hyper-autofluorescence within the lesions. Eyes with choroidal neovascularization, high myopia (> 6 diopters), media opacity and other concomitant diseases were excluded. PR density was calculated using manufacturer-provided AO Detect 1.0 software after adjustment for axial length using IOLMaster® (Zeiss Meditech, CA). Retinal sensitivity was assessed using microperimetry (MP) (Optos SLO, UK) and correlated with PR density using Spearman Rank Correlation test. Results: Twenty-six lesions (9 patients: 7 females, mean age of 54.9 ± 16.6 years; 16 eyes) were analyzed. Diagnoses included ©2015, Copyright by the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc., all rights reserved. Go to iovs.org to access the version of record. For permission to reproduce any abstract, contact the ARVO Office at [email protected]. ARVO 2015 Annual Meeting Abstracts serpiginous choroiditis (2 eyes), birdshot choroidopathy (3 eyes), presumed ocular histoplasmosis syndrome (2 eyes), punctate inner choroidopathy (6 eyes) and multifocal choroiditis (4 eyes). Mean PR density overlying 8 active lesions was 3076 ± 4654.89 cones/ mm2 and 6943.5 ± 5739.51 cones/mm2 overlying 18 inactive lesions (p = 0.117). Mean PR density over 20 lesions with disrupted inner segment-outer segment (IS-OS) junction on SD-OCT was 5005.64 ± 5024.89 cones/mm2 and 6943.5 ± 5739.51 cones/mm2 over 6 lesions with intact IS-OS junction (p = 0.28). Mean retinal sensitivity (7.42 ± 4.70 dB) showed fair correlation with PR density (ρ = 0.43, p = 0.04). Mean retinal sensitivity over lesions with intact IS-OS junction was 13 ± 2.45 dB and 5.71 ± 4.16 dB over lesions with disrupted IS-OS junction (p = 0.007). Appearance of lesions on AO imaging is shown in figure. Conclusions: AO imaging may allow high-resolution analysis of PR loss among lesions in WDS. Such microstructural changes may correlate with functional loss. Image shows an active lesion on FAF (A) associated with focal hypo-intensities on AO imaging (yellow asterisks) suggestive of PR loss (B). Healed lesions (C) show circumferential hypo-intense halo (white arrowheads) surrounding area of scarring (D). Commercial Relationships: Aniruddha Agarwal, None; Mohamed K. Soliman, None; Nithya Rajagopalan, None; Mostafa S. Hanout, None; Mohammad A. Sadiq, None; Loren S. Jack, None; Salman Sarwar, None; Diana V. Do, None; Quan Nguyen, None; Yasir J. Sepah, None ©2015, Copyright by the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc., all rights reserved. Go to iovs.org to access the version of record. For permission to reproduce any abstract, contact the ARVO Office at [email protected].