| Literature DB >> 27409465 |
Alex D Pechauer, Ou Tan, Liang Liu, Yali Jia, Vivian Hou, William Hills, David Huang.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To use multiplane en face Doppler optical coherence tomography (OCT) to measure the change in total retinal blood flow (TRBF) in response to hyperoxia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27409465 PMCID: PMC4968776 DOI: 10.1167/iovs.15-18917
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci ISSN: 0146-0404 Impact factor: 4.799
Figure 1(A) Fundus photo used as a secondary reference to confirm the identification of retinal veins (green arrows with unique tickmark pattern for each vein). Box shows OCT scan area. (B) En face structural OCT image. (C) Illustration showing that the three-dimensional volumetric OCT data were divided into 195 en face planes of 15-μm thickness. (D–G) En face Doppler OCT images. The enclosures outline automatically identified veins. Red enclosures identify the plane of maximum Doppler signal at which flow is measured for the enclosed vein section. Green and blue enclosures outline venous sections that were not used for flow measurement. Each branch vein is measured on only one plane to avoid duplicative flow measurement. Horizontal dotted line separates blood circulation into superior and inferior hemispheres.
Hemodynamic Parameters
Retinal Blood Flow Measured by Doppler OCT
Figure 2The average total retinal blood flow (TRFB) for participants (n = 8) under each breathing condition (mean ± SD). Two-tailed t-tests show statistical significant differences between baseline 1 and hyperoxia 1 (P = 0.05), baseline 2 and hyperoxia 2 (P = 0.001), and baseline 3 and hyperoxia 3 (P = 0.002).
Response of Total Retinal Blood Flow Under Hyperoxia