892 research outputs found
Optical Methods in Sensing and Imaging for Medical and Biological Applications
The recent advances in optical sources and detectors have opened up new opportunities for sensing and imaging techniques which can be successfully used in biomedical and healthcare applications. This book, entitled ‘Optical Methods in Sensing and Imaging for Medical and Biological Applications’, focuses on various aspects of the research and development related to these areas. The book will be a valuable source of information presenting the recent advances in optical methods and novel techniques, as well as their applications in the fields of biomedicine and healthcare, to anyone interested in this subject
Optical coherence tomography: evaluation and clinical application
The ability to examine the appearance of the retina is of paramount importance for
the diagnosis and monitoring of ophthalmic disease and for the evaluation of
treatment outcomes. Direct cross-sectional imaging of retinal structure could be
useful for early diagnosis and more sensitive monitoring of a variety of retinal
conditions such as macular oedema and glaucoma. The view of the fundus given by
ophthalmoscopy provides very limited depth information and clinicians will often
have to resort to additional techniques such as flourescein angiography or visual field
testing for information on structural abnormalities within the retina. Other currently
available imaging techniques do not provide sufficient depth resolution to produce
useful cross-sectional images of retinal structure.
Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a new imaging technique which is capable
of producing cross-sectional images of the retina with a resolution that surpasses that
of conventional imaging techniques. This new technique has axial resolution of
around 1 O.tm and can resolve individual retinal layers, thus providing information on
retinal structure. In principle, OCT is very similar to ultrasound however it makes
use of a light source rather than an acoustic one. The technique is non-contact and
non-invasive and is generally well tolerated by patients. This thesis describes the
evaluation of this new imaging technique with regards to its potential within routine
clinical practice.
A number of investigations were performed to fuffil this evaluation. Tests were
carried out to experimentally measure the system's resolution and the accuracy and
precision of measurements made from the OCT scans. A number of factors that
could affect the quality of the scans were identified and their effects were minimised
wherever possible. The software provided with the system was rigorously tested and
potential sources of error were identified. Various studies were undertaken to
quantify the repeatability and reproducibility of measurements made from scans and
normative values were established. These results were used to assess the ability of
the technique to detect and quantify several retinal disorders. The potential of the
technique for corneal imaging was investigated - a scanning protocol was
established and customised software for processing cornea! scans was developed.
The relationship between OCT bands and retinal morphology was investigated by
correlating scans from canine retina with corresponding light microscopy images and
by observing the position of retinal abnormalities on scans from patients with a
variety of conditions that affected different parts of the retina. Finally the clinical
potential of OCT was investigated by carrying out various studies on a number of
retinal conditions. Further clinical studies which combine anatomical information
from OCT with functional information from electrophysiology are currently
underway.
Current developments are aimed at improving the imaging processing features and
user interface so as to provide a more robust, user-friendly system for routine clinical
use
Development, Optimization and Clinical Evaluation Of Algorithms For Ultrasound Data Analysis Used In Selected Medical Applications.
The assessment of soft and hard tissues is critical when selecting appropriate protocols for restorative and regenerative therapy in the field of dental surgery. The chosen treatment methodology will have significant ramifications on healing time, success rate and overall long-time oral health. Currently used diagnostic methods are limited to visual and invasive assessments; they are often user-dependent, inaccurate and result in misinterpretation. As such, the clinical need has been identified for objective tissue characterization, and the proposed novel ultrasound-based approach was designed to address the identified need. The device prototype consists of a miniaturized probe with a specifically designed ultrasonic transducer, electronics responsible for signal generation and acquisition, as well as an optimized signal processing algorithm required for data analysis. An algorithm where signals are being processed and features extracted in real-time has been implemented and studied. An in-depth algorithm performance study has been presented on synthetic signals. Further, in-vitro laboratory experiments were performed using the developed device with the algorithm implemented in software on animal-based samples. Results validated the capabilities of the new system to reproduce gingival assessment rapidly and effectively. The developed device has met clinical usability requirements for effectiveness and performance
Ex-vivo and In-vivo Characterization of Human Accommodation
A completely satisfying approach to restoring accommodation still needs to be developed. Besides, there are considerable discrepancies between objective and subjective trials to evaluate the therapeutic success. A substantial biomechanical understanding of all structures and processes involved in accommodation as well as presbyopia are needed to develop promising new strategies. This contribution focuses on developing advanced imaging techniques to create a basic understanding of accommodation and presbyopia and to evaluate existing concepts for restoring accommodation. Besides, the emphasis is also on replacing stiff presbyopic lenses by a material that imitates the young crystalline lens
Ocular rigidity : a previously unexplored risk factor in the pathophysiology of open-angle glaucoma : assessment using a novel OCT-based measurement method
Le glaucome est la première cause de cécité irréversible dans le monde. Bien que sa pathogenèse
demeure encore nébuleuse, les propriétés biomécaniques de l’oeil sembleraient jouer un rôle
important dans le développement et la progression de cette maladie. Il est stipulé que la rigidité
oculaire (RO) est altérée au travers les divers stades de la maladie et qu’elle serait le facteur le
plus influent sur la réponse du nerf optique aux variations de la pression intraoculaire (PIO) au
sein du glaucome. Pour permettre l’investigation du rôle de la RO dans le glaucome primaire à
angle ouvert (GPAO), la capacité de quantifier la RO in vivo par l’entremise d’une méthode fiable
et non-invasive est essentielle. Une telle méthode n’est disponible que depuis 2015. Basée sur
l'équation de Friedenwald, cette approche combine l'imagerie par tomographie par cohérence
optique (TCO) et la segmentation choroïdienne automatisée afin de mesurer le changement de
volume choroïdien pulsatile (ΔV), ainsi que la tonométrie dynamique de contour Pascal pour
mesurer le changement de pression pulsatile correspondant.
L’objectif de cette thèse est d’évaluer la validité de cette méthode, et d’en faire usage afin
d’investiguer le rôle de la RO dans les maladies oculaires, particulièrement le GPAO. Plus
spécifiquement, cette thèse vise à : 1) améliorer la méthode proposée et évaluer sa validité ainsi
que sa répétabilité, 2) investiguer l’association entre la RO et le dommage neuro-rétinien chez les
patients glaucomateux, et ceux atteints d’un syndrome de vasospasticité, 3) évaluer l’association
entre la RO et les paramètres biomécaniques de la cornée, 4) évaluer l’association entre la RO et
les pics de PIO survenant suite aux thérapies par injections intravitréennes (IIV), afin de les prédire
et de les prévenir chez les patients à haut risque, et 5) confirmer que la RO est réduite dans les
yeux myopes.
D’abord, nous avons amélioré le modèle mathématique de l’oeil utilisé pour dériver ΔV en le
rendant plus précis anatomiquement et en tenant compte de la choroïde périphérique. Nous
avons démontré la validité et la bonne répétabilité de cette méthodologie. Puis, nous avons
effectué la mesure des coefficients de RO sur un large éventail de sujets sains et glaucomateux
en utilisant notre méthode non-invasive, et avons démontré, pour la première fois, qu'une RO basse est corrélée aux dommages glaucomateux. Les corrélations observées étaient comparables
à celles obtenues avec des facteurs de risque reconnus tels que la PIO maximale. Une forte
corrélation entre la RO et les dommages neuro-rétiniens a été observée chez les patients
vasospastiques, mais pas chez ceux atteints d'une maladie vasculaire ischémique. Cela pourrait
potentiellement indiquer une plus grande susceptibilité au glaucome due à la biomécanique
oculaire chez les patients vasospastiques. Bien que les paramètres biomécaniques cornéens aient
été largement adoptés dans la pratique clinique en tant que substitut pour la RO, propriété
biomécanique globale de l'oeil, nous avons démontré une association limitée entre la RO et ces
paramètres, offrant une nouvelle perspective sur la relation entre les propriétés biomécaniques
cornéennes et globales de l’oeil. Seule une faible corrélation entre le facteur de résistance
cornéenne et la RO demeure après ajustement pour les facteurs de confusion dans le groupe des
patients glaucomateux. Ensuite, nous avons présenté un modèle pour prédire l'amplitude des pics
de PIO après IIV à partir de la mesure non-invasive de la RO. Ceci est particulièrement utile pour
les patients à haut risque atteints de maladies rétiniennes exsudatives et de glaucome qui
nécessiteraient des IIV thérapeutiques, et pourrait permettre aux cliniciens d'ajuster ou de
personnaliser le traitement pour éviter toute perte de vision additionnelle. Enfin, nous avons
étudié les différences de RO entre les yeux myopes et les non-myopes en utilisant cette
technique, et avons démontré une RO inférieure dans la myopie axiale, facteur de risque du
GPAO. Dans l'ensemble, ces résultats contribuent à l’avancement des connaissances sur la
physiopathologie du GPAO. Le développement de notre méthode permettra non seulement de
mieux explorer le rôle de la RO dans les maladies oculaires, mais contribuera également à élucider
les mécanismes et développer de nouveaux traitements ciblant la RO pour contrer la déficience
visuelle liée à ces maladies.Glaucoma is the leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide. While its pathogenesis is yet
to be fully understood, the biomechanical properties of the eye are thought to be involved in the
development and progression of this disease. Ocular rigidity (OR) is thought to be altered through
disease processes and has been suggested to be the most influential factor on the optic nerve
head’s response to variations in intraocular pressure (IOP) in glaucoma. To further investigate the
role of OR in open-angle glaucoma (OAG) and other ocular diseases such as myopia, the ability to
quantify OR in living human eyes using a reliable and non-invasive method is essential. Such a
method has only become available in 2015. Based on the Friedenwald equation, the method uses
time-lapse optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging and automated choroidal segmentation
to measure the pulsatile choroidal volume change (ΔV), and Pascal dynamic contour tonometry
to measure the corresponding pulsatile pressure change.
The purpose of this thesis work was to assess the validity of the methodology, then use it to
investigate the role of OR in ocular diseases, particularly in OAG. More specifically, the objectives
were: 1) To improve the extrapolation of ΔV and evaluate the method’s validity and repeatability,
2) To investigate the association between OR and neuro-retinal damage in glaucomatous
patients, as well as those with concomitant vasospasticity, 3) To evaluate the association between
OR and corneal biomechanical parameters, 4) To assess the association between OR and IOP
spikes following therapeutic intravitreal injections (IVIs), to predict and prevent them in high-risk
patients, and 5) To confirm that OR is lower in myopia.
First, we improved the mathematical model of the eye used to derive ΔV by rendering it more
anatomically accurate and accounting for the peripheral choroid. We also confirmed the validity
and good repeatability of the method. We carried out the measurement of OR coefficients on a
wide range of healthy and glaucomatous subjects using this non-invasive method, and were able
to show, for the first time, that lower OR is correlated with more glaucomatous damage. The
correlations observed were comparable to those obtained with recognized risk factors such as
maximum IOP. A strong correlation between OR and neuro-retinal damage was found in patients with concurrent vasospastic syndrome, but not in those with ischemic vascular disease. This could
perhaps indicate a greater susceptibility to glaucoma due to ocular biomechanics in vasospastic
patients. While corneal biomechanical parameters have been widely adopted in clinical practice
as surrogate measurements for the eye’s overall biomechanical properties represented by OR,
we have shown a limited association between these parameters, bringing new insight unto the
relationship between corneal and global biomechanical properties. Only a weak correlation
between the corneal resistance factor and OR remained in glaucomatous eyes after adjusting for
confounding factors. In addition, we presented a model to predict the magnitude of IOP spikes
following IVIs from the non-invasive measurement of OR. This is particularly useful for high-risk
patients with exudative retinal diseases and glaucoma that require therapeutic IVIs, and could
provide the clinician an opportunity to adjust or customize treatment to prevent further vision
loss. Finally, we investigated OR differences between non-myopic and myopic eyes using this
technique, and demonstrated lower OR in axial myopia, a risk factor for OAG. Overall, these
findings provide new insights unto the pathophysiology of glaucomatous optic neuropathy. The
development of our method will permit further investigation of the role of OR in ocular diseases,
contributing to elucidate mechanisms and provide novel management options to counter vision
impairment caused by these diseases
IN VIVO analysis of ocular morphological changes during phakic accommodation
The principal theme of this thesis is the in vivo examination of ocular morphological changes during phakic accommodation, with particular attention paid to the ciliary muscle and crystalline lens. The investigations detailed involved the application of high-resolution imaging techniques to facilitate the acquisition of new data to assist in the clarification of aspects of the accommodative system that were poorly understood. A clinical evaluation of the newly available Grand Seiko Auto Ref/ Keratometer WAM-5500 optometer was undertaken to assess its value in the field of accommodation research. The device was found to be accurate and repeatable compared to subjective refraction, and has the added advantage of allowing dynamic data collection at a frequency of around 5 Hz. All of the subsequent investigations applied the WAM-5500 for determination of refractive error and objective accommodative responses. Anterior segment optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT) based studies examined the morphology and contractile response of youthful and ageing ciliary muscle. Nasal versus temporal asymmetry was identified, with the temporal aspect being both thicker and demonstrating a greater contractile response. The ciliary muscle was longer in terms of both its anterior (r = 0.49, P <0.001) and overall length (r = 0.45, P = 0.02) characteristics, in myopes. The myopic ciliary muscle does not appear to be merely stretched during axial elongation, as no significant relationship between thickness and refractive error was identified. The main contractile responses observed were a thickening of the anterior region and a shortening of the muscle, particularly anteriorly. Similar patterns of response were observed in subjects aged up to 70 years, supporting a lensocentric theory of presbyopia development. Following the discovery of nasal/ temporal asymmetry in ciliary muscle morphology and response, an investigation was conducted to explore whether the regional variations in muscle contractility impacted on lens stability during accommodation. A bespoke programme was developed to analyse AS-OCT images and determine whether lens tilt and decentration varied between the relaxed and accommodated states. No significant accommodative difference in these parameters was identified, implying that any changes in lens stability with accommodation are very slight, as a possible consequence of vitreous support. Novel three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and analysis techniques were used to investigate changes in lens morphology and ocular conformation during accommodation. An accommodative reduction in lens equatorial diameter provides further evidence to support the Helmholtzian mechanism of accommodation, whilst the observed increase in lens volume challenges the widespread assertion that this structure is incompressible due to its high water content. Wholeeye MRI indicated that the volume of the vitreous chamber remains constant during accommodation. No significant changes in ocular conformation were detected using MRI. The investigations detailed provide further insight into the mechanisms of accommodation and presbyopia, and represent a platform for future work in this field
Corneal biomechanical properties : Measurement, modification and simulation
Esta tesis aborda la medición de las propiedades biomecánicas de la córnea. Se desarrollaron técnicas para medir la rigidez de la córnea in vitro con el fin de estudiar el comportamiento de la córnea como una función de diferentes factores (tales como la hidratación, la geometría, la presión intraocular y la rigidez de la córnea). Los datos experimentales se utilizaron para construir modelos numéricos capaces de reproducir la respuesta biomecánica observada de la córnea. Se aplicaron modelos numéricos para recuperar los parámetros biomecánicos de mediciones de deformación in vivo y para estudiar el efecto de la implantación de segmentos de anillos intraestromales. En particular, se utilizaron el método de inflación en ojos enteros y botones córneales, la extensiometría bídimensional, un soplo de aire combinado con tomografía de coherencia óptica (OCT), microscopía de Brillouin y OCT-vibrografía para las mediciones experimentales. Para el análisis numérico, se construyeron modelos de elementos finitos para estudiar la inflación de ojos enteros y botones córneales, la respuesta de la córnea después de un soplo de aire, el comportamiento del ojo bajo vibración y los cambios refractivos después de la implantación de anillos intraestromales.
This thesis addresses the measurement of the corneal biomechanical properties. Techniques were developed to measure the corneal stiffness in vitro in order to study the corneal behavior as a function of different factors (such as hydration, geometry, intraocular pressure, corneal stiffness). Experimental data were used to build numerical models, which were able to reproduce the observed biomechanical response of the cornea. Numerical models were applied to retrieve biomechanical parameters from in vivo deformation measurements and to study the outcome with implantation of intrastromal ring segments. In particular whole-eye / corneal inflation, 2D extensiometry, an air-puff technique combined with optical coherence tomography (OCT), Brillouin microscopy and OCT-vibrography were used for the experimental measurements. For the numerical analysis, finite element models were built for eye inflation, corneal response following an air-puff, ocular vibration behavior and refractive changes after ICRS implantation
Microscopy and Analysis
Microscopes represent tools of the utmost importance for a wide range of disciplines. Without them, it would have been impossible to stand where we stand today in terms of understanding the structure and functions of organelles and cells, tissue composition and metabolism, or the causes behind various pathologies and their progression. Our knowledge on basic and advanced materials is also intimately intertwined to the realm of microscopy, and progress in key fields of micro- and nanotechnologies critically depends on high-resolution imaging systems. This volume includes a series of chapters that address highly significant scientific subjects from diverse areas of microscopy and analysis. Authoritative voices in their fields present in this volume their work or review recent trends, concepts, and applications, in a manner that is accessible to a broad readership audience from both within and outside their specialist area
Biomechanical aspects of the anterior segment in human myopia
The thesis investigates the relationship between the biomechanical properties of the anterior human sclera and cornea in vivo using Schiotz tonometry (ST), rebound tonometry (RBT, iCare) and the Ocular Response Analyser (ORA, Reichert). Significant differences in properties were found to occur between scleral quadrants. Structural correlates for the differences were examined using Partial Coherent Interferometry (IOLMaster, Zeiss), Optical Coherent tomography (Visante OCT), rotating Scheimpflug photography (Pentacam, Oculus) and 3-D Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). Subject groups were employed that allowed investigation of variation pertaining to ethnicity and refractive error. One hundred thirty-five young adult subjects were drawn from three ethnic groups: British-White (BW), British-South-Asian (BSA) and Hong-Kong-Chinese (HKC) comprising non-myopes and myopes. Principal observations: ST demonstrated significant regional variation in scleral resistance a) with lowest levels at quadrant superior-temporal and highest at inferior-nasal; b) with distance from the limbus, anterior locations showing greater resistance. Variations in resistance using RBT were similar to those found with ST; however the predominantly myopic HKC group had a greater overall mean resistance when compared to the BW-BSA group. OCT-derived scleral thickness measurements indicated the sclera to be thinner superiorly than inferiorly. Thickness varied with distance from the corneolimbal junction, with a decline from 1 to 2 mm followed by a successive increase from 3 to 7 mm. ORA data varied with ethnicity and refractive status; whilst axial length (AL) was associated with corneal biometrics for BW-BSA individuals it was associated with IOP in the HKC individuals. Complex interrelationships were found between ORA Additional-Waveform-Parameters and biometric data provided by the Pentacam. OCT indicated ciliary muscle thickness to be greater in myopia and more directly linked to posterior ocular volume (from MRI) than AL. Temporal surface areas (SAs, from MRI) were significantly smaller than nasal SAs in myopic eyes; globe bulbosity (from MRI) was constant across quadrants
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