Affiliation:
1. University of Rochester
2. University of California Berkeley
Abstract
In prior art, advances in adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscope
(AOSLO) technology have enabled cones in the human fovea to be
resolved in healthy eyes with normal vision and low to moderate
refractive errors, providing new insight into human foveal anatomy,
visual perception, and retinal degenerative diseases. These
high-resolution ophthalmoscopes require careful alignment of each
optical subsystem to ensure diffraction-limited imaging performance,
which is necessary for resolving the smallest foveal cones. This paper
presents a systematic and rigorous methodology for building, aligning,
calibrating, and testing an AOSLO designed for imaging the cone mosaic
of the central fovea in humans with cellular resolution. This
methodology uses a two-stage alignment procedure and thorough system
testing to achieve diffraction-limited performance. Results from
retinal imaging of healthy human subjects under 30 years of age with
refractive errors of less than 3.5 diopters using either 680 nm or
840 nm light show that the system can resolve cones at the very center
of the fovea, the region where the cones are smallest and most densely
packed.
Funder
National Institutes of
Health
National Science Foundation
Cited by
5 articles.
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