Background
Post-translational protein modification by lipid peroxidation products or glycation is a feature of aging as well as pathologic
processes in postmitotic cells at the ocular fundus exposed to an oxidative environment. The accumulation of modified proteins
such as those found in lipofuscin and advanced glycation end products (AGEs) contribute greatly to the fundus auto-fluorescence.
The distinct fluorescence spectra of lipofuscin and AGE enable their differentiation in multispectral fundus fluorescence
imaging.
Method
A dual-centre consecutive case series of 78 pseudo-phacic patients is reported. Digital colour fundus photographs as well
as auto-fluorescence images were taken from 33 patients with age related macular degeneration (AMD), 13 patients with diabetic
retinopathy (RD), or from 32 cases without pathologic findings (controls). Fluorescence was excited at 475–515 nm or 476–604 nm
and recorded in the emission bands 530–675 nm or 675–715 nm, respectively. Fluorescence images excited at 475–515 nm were
taken by a colour CCD-camera (colour-fluorescence imaging) enabling the separate recording of green and red fluorescence.
The ratio of green versus red fluorescence was calculated within a representative region of each image.
Results
The 530–675 nm auto-fluorescence in AMD patients was dominated by the red emission (green vs. red ratio, g/r = 0.861). In
comparison, the fluorescence of the diabetics was green-shifted (g/r = 0.946; controls: g/r = 0.869). Atrophic areas (geographic
atrophy, laser scars) showed massive hypo-fluorescence in both emission bands. Hyper-fluorescent drusen and exudates, unobtrusive
in the colour fundus images as well as in the fluorescence images with emission >667 nm, showed an impressive green-shift
in the colour-fluorescence image.
Conclusions
Lipofuscin is the dominant fluorophore at long wavelengths (>675 nm or red channel of the colour fluorescence image). In the
green spectral region, we found an additional emission of collagen and elastin (optic disc, sclera) as well as deposits in
drusen and exudates. The green shift of the auto-fluorescence in RD may be a hint of increased AGE concentrations.
Keywords Fundus auto-fluorescence - Age-related macular degeneration - Diabetic retinopathy - Colour-autofluorescence imaging
None of the authors has any financial relationship. All primary data are under full control of the authors and may be reviewed
upon request.