White light polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography for sub-micron axial resolution and spectroscopic contrast in the murine retina

  • Harper D
  • Augustin M
  • Lichtenegger A
  • et al.
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Abstract

© 2018, OSA - The Optical Society. All rights reserved. A white light polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography system has been developed, using a supercontinuum laser as the light source. By detecting backscattered light from 400 - 700 nm, an axial resolution of 1.0 µm in air was achieved. The system consists of a freespace interferometer and two homemade spectrometers that detect orthogonal polarization states. Following system specifications, images of a healthy murine retina as acquired by this non-contact system are presented, showing high resolution reflectivity images as well as spectroscopic and polarization sensitive contrast. Additional images of the very-low-density-lipoprotein-receptor (VLDLR) knockout mouse model were acquired. The high resolution allows the detection of small lesions in the retina.

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Harper, D. J., Augustin, M., Lichtenegger, A., Eugui, P., Reyes, C., Glösmann, M., … Baumann, B. (2018). White light polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography for sub-micron axial resolution and spectroscopic contrast in the murine retina. Biomedical Optics Express, 9(5), 2115. https://doi.org/10.1364/boe.9.002115

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