1. Second harmonic generation imaging of the pig lamina cribrosa using a scanning laser ophthalmoscope-based microscope
- Author
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L. Lomb, Josef F. Bille, M. Agopov, and O. La Schiazza
- Subjects
Lamina ,Materials science ,Microscope ,genetic structures ,Hydrostatic pressure ,Optic Disk ,Sus scrofa ,Dermatology ,law.invention ,Optics ,law ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Animals ,Intraocular Pressure ,Microscopy, Confocal ,business.industry ,Ophthalmoscopes ,Resolution (electron density) ,Second-harmonic generation ,Laser ,Ophthalmoscopy ,Femtosecond ,Models, Animal ,Sapphire ,Surgery ,sense organs ,business - Abstract
We describe a novel scanning laser ophthalmoscope (SLO)-based on a video-rate second harmonic generation imaging microscope. A titanium:sapphire femtosecond laser was coupled to a modified SLO. The laser beam was scanned over the sample, and the light produced by second harmonic generation (SHG) was collected for imaging at video-speed. The device was used for imaging the lamina cribrosa (LC) of enucleated pig eyes. A resolution comparable to that of commercial multiphoton microscopes was reached. The SHG images were used for determining the average pore size of the LC determined from the images; the pressure dependence of the pore size was studied by the artificial increasing of the hydrostatic pressure in the eye. A pressure increase of 44.3 mmHg enlarged the average pore size of 62 analyzed pores by a statistically significant amount. The relative pore growth was measured at four different pressure levels in 25 pores. The pressure was increased in 15 mmHg steps. A general tendency for monothonic growth was observed, although single pores grew by no means linearly.
- Published
- 2008