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Club Jules Gonin

Multimodal imaging in macular diagnostics: combined OCT-SLO improves therapeutical monitoring

Christian Karl Brinkmann, Sebastian Wolf and Ute Ellen Kathrin Wolf-Schnurrbusch

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Abstract

Background  

Digital imaging methods are a centrepiece for diagnosis and management of macular disease. A recently developed imaging device is composed of simultaneous confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (SLO) and optical coherence tomography (OCT). By means of clinical samples the benefit of this technique concerning diagnostic and therapeutic follow-up will be assessed.

Methods  

The combined OCT-SLO-System (Ophthalmic Technologies Inc., Toronto, Canada) allows for confocal en-face fundus imaging and high resolution OCT scanning at the same time. OCT images are obtained from transversal line scans. One light source and the identical scanning rate yield a pixel-to-pixel correspondence of images. Three-dimensional thickness maps are derived from C-scan stacking.

Results  

We followed-up patients with cystoid macular edema, pigment epithelium detachment, macular hole, venous branch occlusion, and vitreoretinal tractions during their course of therapy. The new imaging method illustrates the reduction of cystoid volume, e.g. after intravitreal injections of either angiostatic drugs or steroids. C-scans are used for appreciation of lesion diameters, visualisation of pathologies involving the vitreoretinal interface, and quantification of retinal thickness change.

Conclusion  

The combined OCT-SLO system creates both topographic and tomographic images of the retina. New therapeutic options can be followed-up closely by observing changes in lesion thickness and cyst volumes. For clinical use further studies are needed.

Keywords  Combined OCT-SLO - En-face imaging - C-scan OCT - Pixel-to-pixel correspondence - 3D retinal maps

Contents of this article were presented at DOG 2006 in Berlin.
The authors do not have any proprietary interest in this study.

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