KEYWORDS: Depolarization, Signal to noise ratio, Eye, Retina, Tissues, Polarization, In vivo imaging, Optical calibration, Calibration, Image segmentation
SignificanceA data-based calibration method with enhanced depolarization contrast in polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography (PS-OCT) was developed and demonstrated effective for detecting melanin content in the eye.AimWe aim to mitigate the dependence between the measured depolarization metric and the intensity signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for improved visualization of depolarizing tissues, especially in low SNR regions, and to demonstrate the enhanced depolarization contrast to evaluate melanin presence.ApproachA function for calibrating the depolarization metric was experimentally derived from the young albino guinea pig, assuming depolarization free in the retina. A longitudinal study of guinea pigs (9 weeks) was conducted to assess the accumulation of melanin during early eye growth. Furthermore, the melanin content of the sub-macular choroid was compared in eyes with light and dark irides involving 14 human subjects in early middle adulthood.ResultsWe observed an increase in the improved depolarization contrast, which indicates potential melanin accumulation in the early eye development with age in the pigmented guinea pig eyes. We found a significant difference in melanin content between human eyes with light and dark colors.ConclusionsOur proposed calibration method enhanced the visualization of depolarizing structures in PS-OCT, which can be generalized to all kinds of polarization-sensitive imaging and can potentially monitor melanin in healthy and pathological eyes.
Polarization-sensitive OCT (PS-OCT) derives image contrast from tissue birefringence. Here, we introduced triple-input polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography (TRIPS-OCT), a new polarimetric modulation and reconstruction strategy for depth-resolved tomographic birefringence imaging in-vivo. We modulated the polarization states between three repeated frames and enabled the reconstruction of the Mueller matrix at each location within the triple-measured frames. We demonstrated a 2-fold reduction of the birefringence noise floor compared to the conventional dual-input reconstruction method, and a 3-fold reduction of the measurement error of optic axis orientation in retinal imaging with the compensation of corneal retardance and diattenuation.
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