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Enhanced Quantification of Retinal Perfusion by Improved Discrimination of Blood Flow From Bulk Motion Signal in OCTA
- Source :
- Translational Vision Science & Technology
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO), 2018.
-
Abstract
- Purpose Quantification of optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) is confounded by the prevalence of bulk motion. We have previously developed a regression-based bulk motion subtraction (rb-BMS) algorithm that estimates bulk motion velocity and corrects for its effect on flow signal. Here, we aim to investigate its ability to improve the reliability of capillary density (CD) quantification. Methods Two spectral-domain systems (70-kHz Avanti/AngioVue and 68-kHz Cirrus/AngioPlex) acquired 6 × 6-mm OCTA scans. The rb-BMS algorithm was applied on each OCTA volume. Regression analysis of angiographic versus reflectance signal of avascular A-lines in B-frames was used to set an optimized reflectance-adjusted threshold for discriminating vascular versus nonvascular voxels. The CD was calculated from en face maximum projections of the superficial vascular complex in macular scans and the nerve fiber layer plexus in disc scans, excluding large vessels. The retinal signal strength (RSS) was calculated by averaging the logarithmic-scale OCT reflectance signal, and its correlation with CD was investigated. Results Eight healthy eyes were scanned with each instrument on 2 separate days. The rb-BMS algorithm improved within-visit repeatability and between-visit reproducibility of CD compared with a global-threshold measurement algorithm. Using the rb-BMS algorithm, the CD results were less affected by RSS and the population variation was reduced. Motion-induced line artifacts were also reduced. Conclusions The rb-BMS algorithm improved the reliability of perfusion quantification in OCTA on both Food and Drug Administration-cleared spectral-domain OCTA systems. Translational relevance The rb-BMS method helped reduce the inter-scan variability by generating accurate vessel maps, improving the reliability of retinal perfusion quantification.
- Subjects :
- Materials science
Biomedical Engineering
Nerve fiber layer
motion artifacts
computer.software_genre
01 natural sciences
Signal
010309 optics
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
0302 clinical medicine
Voxel
vessel density
0103 physical sciences
medicine
Reproducibility
Subtraction
Retinal
Articles
Repeatability
Blood flow
Ophthalmology
medicine.anatomical_structure
chemistry
030221 ophthalmology & optometry
OCTA
computer
Biomedical engineering
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21642591
- Volume :
- 7
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Translational Vision Science & Technology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....78d39ccdd35f3ffd032c88f1fb3c5a6b
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1167/tvst.7.6.20