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The noninvasive techniques of static and dynamic light scattering are emerging as valuable diagnostic tools for the early detection of ocular and systemic diseases. These include corneal abnormalities...
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Seeing the invisible: the challenge of imaging vitreous

J. Biomed. Opt., Vol. 9, 38 (2004); doi:10.1117/1.1627339

Online Publication Date: 7 January 2004
J. Sebag
Doheny Eye Institute, University of Southern California, Huntington Beach, California 92647
Imaging the vitreous is an attempt to view what is by design invisible. The inability to adequately image vitreous hinders a more complete understanding of its normal structure and function and how these change in aging and disease. The combined use of more than one technique could provide better imaging for investigational and clinical purposes. Past and present imaging methodologies are summarized and research and clinical techniques that are currently in development for future applications, are discussed. Dark-field slit microscopy has been used to characterize vitreous anatomy, both within the vitreous body as well as at the vitreo–retinal interface. In addition to this methodology, slit-lamp biomicroscopy; direct, indirect, and scanning laser ophthalmoscopies; ultrasonography; optical coherence tomography; magnetic resonance and Raman spectroscopies; and dynamic light-scattering methodologies for noninvasive evaluation are presented. Dark-field slit microscopy enables in vitro imaging without dehydration or tissue fixatives. Optical coherence tomography enables better in vivo visualization of the vitreo-retinal interface than scanning laser ophthalmoscopy and ultrasonography, but does not image the vitreous body. Dynamic light scattering can determine the average sizes of vitreous macromolecules within the vitreous body as well as possibly image the posterior vitreous cortex once detached, while Raman spectroscopy can detect altered vitreous molecules, such as glycated collagen and other proteins in diabetic vitreopathy.

©2004 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers.
History: Received Apr. 8, 2003; accepted Jul. 1, 2003
DOI Link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/1.1627339
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KEYWORDS and PACS

Keywords
PACS
  • 42.66.Ct
    Anatomy and optics of eye
  • 87.63.Lk
    Visible radiation: diaphanography, transillumination, laser imaging in medicine
  • 87.64.Rr
    Light microscopy in biophysics and medical physics: bright-field, dark-field, phase contrast, DIC
  • 87.63.Df
    Ultrasonography (medical imaging)
  • 42.25.Kb
    Optical coherence
  • 42.30.Wb
    Image reconstruction; tomography
  • 87.64.Tt
    Confocal microscopy in biophysics and medical physics
  • 87.14.Ee
    Proteins
  • 87.61.Pk
    Clinical MRI studies
  • YEAR: 2004

JOURNAL DATA

ISSN:
1083-3668 (print)   1560-2281 (online)
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef SPIE

REFERENCES (32)

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