학술논문

DIRECTIONAL OPTICAL COHERENCE TOMOGRAPHY PROVIDES ACCURATE OUTER NUCLEAR LAYER AND HENLE FIBER LAYER MEASUREMENTS
Document Type
article
Source
Retina. 35(8)
Subject
Biomedical Imaging
Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision
Neurodegenerative
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
Detection
screening and diagnosis
Adolescent
Adult
Cell Nucleus
Ependymoglial Cells
Female
Fourier Analysis
Healthy Volunteers
Humans
Male
Nerve Fibers
Prospective Studies
Retinal Neurons
Tomography
Optical Coherence
Young Adult
spectral domain
Fourier domain
directional reflectivity
outer plexiform layer
Henle's fiber layer
photoreceptors
cones
rods
biomarker
Opthalmology and Optometry
Ophthalmology & Optometry
Language
Abstract
PurposeThe outer nuclear layer (ONL) contains photoreceptor nuclei, and its thickness is an important biomarker for retinal degenerations. Accurate ONL thickness measurements are obscured in standard optical coherence tomography (OCT) images because of Henle fiber layer (HFL). Improved differentiation of the ONL and HFL boundary is made possible by using directional OCT, a method that purposefully varies the pupil entrance position of the OCT beam.MethodsFifty-seven normal eyes were imaged using multiple pupil entry positions with a commercial spectral domain OCT system. Cross-sectional image sets were registered to each other and segmented at the top of HFL, the border of HFL and the ONL and at the external limiting membrane. Thicknesses of the ONL and HFL were measured and analyzed.ResultsThe true ONL and HFL thicknesses varied substantially by eccentricity and between individuals. The true macular ONL thickness comprised an average of 54.6% of measurements that also included HFL. The ONL and HFL thicknesses at specific retinal eccentricities were poorly correlated.ConclusionAccurate ONL and HFL thickness measurements are made possible by the optical contrast of directional OCT. Distinguishing these individual layers can improve clinical trial endpoints and assessment of disease progression.