Extending field-of-view of retinal imaging by optical coherence tomography using convolutional Lissajous and slow scan patterns

  • Makita S
  • Azuma S
  • Mino T
  • et al.
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Abstract

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a high-speed non-invasive cross-sectional imaging technique. Although its imaging speed is high, three-dimensional high-spatial-sampling-density imaging of in vivo tissues with a wide field-of-view (FOV) is challenging. We employed convolved Lissajous and slow circular scanning patterns to extend the FOV of retinal OCT imaging with a 1-µm, 100-kHz-sweep-rate swept-source OCT prototype system. Displacements of sampling points due to eye movements are corrected by post-processing based on a Lissajous scan. Wide FOV three-dimensional retinal imaging with high sampling density and motion correction is achieved. Three-dimensional structures obtained using repeated imaging sessions of a healthy volunteer and two patients showed good agreement. The demonstrated technique will extend the FOV of simple point-scanning OCT, such as commercial ophthalmic OCT devices, without sacrificing sampling density.

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Makita, S., Azuma, S., Mino, T., Yamaguchi, T., Miura, M., & Yasuno, Y. (2022). Extending field-of-view of retinal imaging by optical coherence tomography using convolutional Lissajous and slow scan patterns. Biomedical Optics Express, 13(10), 5212. https://doi.org/10.1364/boe.467563

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