High Resolution, High-speed Multimodal Ophthalmic Imaging
High Resolution and High Speed Multimodal Ophthalmic Imaging
Centre Hospitalier National d'Ophtalmologie des Quinze-Vingts
1,200 participants
Jul 3, 2019
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Knowledge of the pathogenesis of ocular conditions, a leading cause of blindness, has benefited greatly from recent advances in ophthalmic imaging. However, current clinical imaging systems are limited in resolution, speed, or access to certain structures of the eye. The use of a high-resolution imaging system improves the resolution of ophthalmoscopes by several orders of magnitude, allowing the visualization of many microstructures of the eye: photoreceptors, vessels, nerve bundles in the retina, cells and nerves in the cornea. The use of a high-speed acquisition imaging system makes it possible to detect functional measurements such as the speed of blood flow. The combination of data from multiple imaging systems to obtain multimodal information is of great importance for improving the understanding of structural changes in the eye during a disease. The purpose of this project is to observe structures that are not detectable with routinely used systems.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria4
- People over 18
- Patient with a pathology affecting the eye or healthy volunteer
- Participant who signed the consent
- Beneficiaries of the health insurance
Exclusion Criteria11
- Patients with a history of photosensitivity.
- Patients who have just received a photodynamic therapy treatment (
- Patients taking drugs with photosensitivity as a side effect.
- Persons with pacemakers or other implanted electronic medical device
- Patients with viral conjunctivitis or any other infectious disease.
- Patients with skin lesions on the neck or forehead
- Patients at high risk of damage from optical radiation, such as aphakic patients, or patients with decreased sensitivity to light due to fundus disease.
- Pregnant or lactating women
- Participant unable to be followed throughout the study
- Vulnerable people
- Subjects with predisposition to closure of the iridocorneal angle
Interventions
The protocol consists of performing retinal imaging using full-field optical coherence tomography. The participant is asked to put his forehead against the temple supports and his chin on a chin rest. The subject will be asked to fix a test pattern in the form of a cross. The pattern is positioned according to the desired eccentricity with respect to the fovea. The actual acquisition lasts a few seconds, possibly repeated to cover the field of the desired eye. The acquisition protocol depends on the subjects, their pathology and the system used; the area examined will be modified on a case by case basis. The total duration of each exam can be estimated at less than half an hour, with frequent breaks.
The protocol consists of performing retinal imaging using a laser Doppler holography. For each system, the participant is asked to put his forehead against the temple supports and his chin on a chin rest. The subject will be asked to fix a test pattern in the form of a cross. The pattern is positioned according to the desired eccentricity with respect to the fovea. The actual acquisition lasts a few seconds, possibly repeated to cover the field of the desired eye. The acquisition protocol depends on the subjects, their pathology and the system used; the area examined will be modified on a case by case basis. The total duration of each exam can be estimated at less than half an hour, with frequent breaks.
Locations(1)
View Full Details on ClinicalTrials.gov
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NCT04129021