Abstract

Spatiotemporal optical coherence tomography (STOC-T) is the novel modality for high-speed, crosstalk- and aberration-free volumetric imaging of biological tissue in vivo. STOC-T extends the Fourier-Domain holographic Optical Coherence Tomography by the spatial phase modulation that enables the reduction of spatial coherence of the tunable laser. By reducing the spatial coherence of the laser, we suppress coherent noise, and, consequently, improve the imaging depth. Furthermore, we remove geometrical aberrations computationally in postprocessing. We recently demonstrated high-speed, high-resolution STOC-T of human retinal imaging in vivo. Here, we show that the dataset produced by STOC-T can be processed differently to reveal blood flow in the human retina in vivo. To render the blood flow, we first pre-process STOC-T holographic data to access the approximated information about the Doppler-shifted optical field backscattered from the sample. Then, we analyze it using methods from the laser Doppler flowmetry, namely, by analyzing the Doppler broadening caused by moving light scatterers (red blood cells). However, contrary to conventional approaches, we use multiple illumination wavelengths. This enables us to render the structural volumetric and blood flow images from the same dataset concurrently. Our method, denoted as multiwavelength laser Doppler holography (MLDH), links laser Doppler flowmetry with multiwavelength holographic detection to enable noninvasive visualization and possible blood flow quantification at different human retina layers at high speeds and high transverse resolution in vivo.

Full Text
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