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Adaptive spectroscopic visible-light optical coherence tomography for clinical retinal oximetry.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Rubinoff, I; Kuranov, RV; Fang, R; Ghassabi, Z; Wang, Y; Beckmann, L; Miller, DA; Wollstein, G; Ishikawa, H; Schuman, JS; Zhang, HF
Published in: Communications medicine
April 2023

Retinal oxygen saturation (sO2) provides essential information about the eye's response to pathological changes that can result in vision loss. Visible-light optical coherence tomography (vis-OCT) is a noninvasive tool that has the potential to measure retinal sO2 in a clinical setting. However, its reliability is currently limited by unwanted signals referred to as spectral contaminants (SCs), and a comprehensive strategy to isolate true oxygen-dependent signals from SCs in vis-OCT is lacking.We develop an adaptive spectroscopic vis-OCT (ADS-vis-OCT) technique that can adaptively remove SCs and accurately measure sO2 under the unique conditions of each vessel. We also validate the accuracy of ADS-vis-OCT using ex vivo blood phantoms and assess its repeatability in the retina of healthy volunteers.In ex vivo blood phantoms, ADS-vis-OCT agrees with a blood gas machine with only a 1% bias in samples with sO2 ranging from 0% to 100%. In the human retina, the root mean squared error between sO2 values in major arteries measured by ADS-vis-OCT and a pulse oximeter is 2.1% across 18 research participants. Additionally, the standard deviations of repeated ADS-vis-OCT measurements of sO2 values in smaller arteries and veins are 2.5% and 2.3%, respectively. Non-adaptive methods do not achieve comparable repeatabilities from healthy volunteers.ADS-vis-OCT effectively removes SCs from human images, yielding accurate and repeatable sO2 measurements in retinal arteries and veins with varying diameters. This work could have important implications for the clinical use of vis-OCT to manage eye diseases.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Communications medicine

DOI

EISSN

2730-664X

ISSN

2730-664X

Publication Date

April 2023

Volume

3

Issue

1

Start / End Page

57
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Rubinoff, I., Kuranov, R. V., Fang, R., Ghassabi, Z., Wang, Y., Beckmann, L., … Zhang, H. F. (2023). Adaptive spectroscopic visible-light optical coherence tomography for clinical retinal oximetry. Communications Medicine, 3(1), 57. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-023-00288-8
Rubinoff, Ian, Roman V. Kuranov, Raymond Fang, Zeinab Ghassabi, Yuanbo Wang, Lisa Beckmann, David A. Miller, et al. “Adaptive spectroscopic visible-light optical coherence tomography for clinical retinal oximetry.Communications Medicine 3, no. 1 (April 2023): 57. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-023-00288-8.
Rubinoff I, Kuranov RV, Fang R, Ghassabi Z, Wang Y, Beckmann L, et al. Adaptive spectroscopic visible-light optical coherence tomography for clinical retinal oximetry. Communications medicine. 2023 Apr;3(1):57.
Rubinoff, Ian, et al. “Adaptive spectroscopic visible-light optical coherence tomography for clinical retinal oximetry.Communications Medicine, vol. 3, no. 1, Apr. 2023, p. 57. Epmc, doi:10.1038/s43856-023-00288-8.
Rubinoff I, Kuranov RV, Fang R, Ghassabi Z, Wang Y, Beckmann L, Miller DA, Wollstein G, Ishikawa H, Schuman JS, Zhang HF. Adaptive spectroscopic visible-light optical coherence tomography for clinical retinal oximetry. Communications medicine. 2023 Apr;3(1):57.

Published In

Communications medicine

DOI

EISSN

2730-664X

ISSN

2730-664X

Publication Date

April 2023

Volume

3

Issue

1

Start / End Page

57