研究目的
To explore the quantitative properties of OCTA and the development of variable interscan time analysis (VISTA) for objective assessment and follow-up of retinal pathologies.
研究成果
VISTA has provided valuable insight into various retinal vascular pathologies and has the potential to become an essential tool for screening purposes. Future advancements may allow for quantification of retinal and choroidal blood flow velocities and wider field-of-view imaging.
研究不足
VISTA demonstrates relative blood flow speeds, not absolute flow speeds. OCTA images are affected by artifacts such as shadowing, projection artifacts, and motion artifacts. The field-of-view is restricted, and increasing it comes with a trade-off in scanning density.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
The study utilizes OCTA for depth-resolved visualization of retinal vasculature and develops the VISTA algorithm for flow speed mapping.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
Analysis includes patients with various retinal pathologies such as geographic atrophy, choroidal neovascularization, and diabetic retinopathy.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
Uses swept-source OCTA prototype device with increased scanning speeds (~400,000 A-scans per second).
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
Acquires B-scans in rapid succession at specific locations and uses the decorrelation signal between them to generate angiographic data. VISTA assesses the decorrelation signal between consecutive B-scans (~
5:5 ms) and between alternative B-scans (~3 ms). Data Analysis Methods:
Generates a color-coded map of relative blood flow speeds with slow blood flow speeds in blue and faster blood flow speeds in red.
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