| Literature DB >> 31772487 |
Jeong Oen Lee1, Vinayak Narasimhan2, Ashwin Balakrishna3, Marcus R Smith4, Juan Du5, David Sretavan5, Hyuck Choo6.
Abstract
Our understanding of ocular hemodynamics and its role in ophthalmic disease progression remains unclear due to the shortcomings of precise and on-demand biomedical sensing technologies. Here, we report high-resolution in vivo assessment of ocular hemodynamics using a Fabry-Pérot cavity-based micro-optical sensor and a portable optical detector. The designed optical system is capable of measuring both static intraocular pressure and dynamic ocular pulsation profiles in parallel. Through a dynamic intensity variation analysis method which improves sensing resolution by 3-4 folds, our system is able to extract systolic/diastolic phases from a single ocular pulsation profile. Using a portable detector, we performed in vivo studies on rabbits and verified that ophthalmic parameters obtained from our optical system closely match with traditional techniques such as tonometry, electrocardiography, and photo-plethysmography.Entities:
Keywords: Fabry-Pérot interferometer; implantable sensor; intraocular pressure sensor; ocular hemodynamics; optical sensing; portable detector
Year: 2019 PMID: 31772487 PMCID: PMC6879107 DOI: 10.1109/LPT.2019.2896840
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE Photonics Technol Lett ISSN: 1041-1135 Impact factor: 2.468