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Validating a low-cost laser speckle contrast imaging system as a quantitative tool for assessing retinal vascular function

Dwani Patel, Daniel M. Lipinski

2020Scientific Reports24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The ability to monitor progression of retinal vascular diseases like diabetic retinopathy in small animal models is often complicated by their failure to develop the end-stage complications which characterize the human phenotypes in disease. Interestingly, as micro-vascular dysfunction typically precedes the onset of retinal vascular and even some neurodegenerative diseases, the ability to visualize and quantify hemodynamic changes (e.g. decreased flow or occlusion) in retinal vessels may serve as a useful diagnostic indicator of disease progression and as a therapeutic outcome measure in response to treatment. Nevertheless, the ability to precisely and accurately quantify retinal hemodynamics remains an unmet challenge in ophthalmic research. Herein we demonstrate the ability to modify a commercial fundus camera into a low-cost laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) system for contrast-free and non-invasive quantification of relative changes to retinal hemodynamics over a wide field-of-view in a rodent model.

Topics & Concepts

RetinalSpeckle patternHemodynamicsFundus (uterus)Contrast (vision)MedicineOphthalmologyRetinaDiabetic retinopathyNeurosciencePathologyComputer scienceCardiologyArtificial intelligenceBiologyEndocrinologyDiabetes mellitusThermoregulation and physiological responsesOptical Imaging and Spectroscopy TechniquesVisual perception and processing mechanisms
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