(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2001;42:2981-2989.)
© 2001
by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
Noninvasive Imaging by Optical Coherence Tomography to Monitor Retinal Degeneration in the Mouse
Qiuhong Li1,
Adrian M. Timmers1,
Kirk Hunter2,
Carlos Gonzalez-Pola1,
Alfred S. Lewin3,
David H. Reitze2 and
William W. Hauswirth1,3
1 From the Departments of Ophthalmology,
3 Molecular Genetics & Microbiology, and
2 Physics, University of Florida, Gainesville.
 |
Abstract
|
|---|
PURPOSE. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a high-resolution imaging
technique that measures the intensity of backscattered light from
biological microstructures in living tissue. The objective was to
evaluate OCT as a routine, noninvasive technique for quantitative
measurements of retinal thickness and detachment in small animal models
of retinal degenerative diseases.
METHODS. An OCT scanning unit was designed and built to visualize retinal tissue
from rodents at high resolution in vivo. Several normal and retinal
degeneration (rd) mouse strains with different
pigmentation, as well as a transgenic mouse strain that carries a
wild-type ß-PDE gene in an
rd/rd background, were analyzed at
different ages. Retinal detachment was induced by subretinal injection
of saline. Retinal function was evaluated by full-field ERG, and then
each retina was cross-sectionally scanned by OCT. OCT image analysis
and measurements of retinal thickness were performed. Animals were then
killed and retinal histology was documented.
RESULTS. OCT images of the mouse retina revealed structural landmarks allowing
assignment of retinal structures. There was no difference in the OCT
pattern between pigmented and nonpigmented mice. Changes in the retinal
thickness measured by OCT correlated very well with the loss in
function measured by ERG and histology in
rd/rd and
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic mice at a variety of ages. In addition, retinal detachment
caused by surgery was easily visualized and observed by OCT imaging.
CONCLUSIONS. OCT imaging is applicable to the mouse retina. There is excellent
agreement between the retinal thickness measured by OCT, ERG amplitude,
and retinal histology, thus validating OCT imaging as a sensitive and
noninvasive tool for monitoring the structural progression of retinal
diseases in rodent models. OCT also appears useful for visualizing
retinal detachments in the mouse.
 |
Introduction
|
|---|
Rodent models are extremely useful in understanding the
cellular and molecular events associated with retinal degenerative
diseases.1
2
Unfortunately, it has been difficult to
monitor the cellular structure of the rodent retina without killing the
animal for conventional histology. Consequently, large numbers of
genetically defined animals must be used to obtain a convincing
experimental result. The pivotal issue is that retinal morphology
cannot be observed noninvasively through the course of degeneration in
a single animal; thus, each animal contributes just a single time point
to understanding a full disease progression. Given the variety of new
gene and pharmacologic therapies that may retard the progression of
retinal degeneration,3
4
5
6
7
the ability to observe a
therapeutic regimen through its entire course in individual rodent
models would greatly enhance the speed and reliability of testing and
would reduce the number of experimental animals required. The growing
number of newly recognized mouse models exhibiting genetically based
retinal degeneration8
9
further emphasizes the need for
rapid, noninvasive analysis of retinal degeneration in small eyes.
Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a noncontact, noninvasive optical
imaging technique that measures the intensity of backscattered
light.10
11
12
OCT was originally developed for performing
high-resolution tomographic imaging of ocular tissues, but has recently
been used for imaging a wide range of nontransparent tissues as
well.13
14
15
16
17
OCT produces cross-sectional images of optical
reflectivity in the tissue analogous to ultrasound B-scan, providing
greater resolution by using light instead of sound waves. The principle
of OCT is based on low-coherence interferometry. A schematic of the
apparatus is shown in Figure 1
. OCT is now relatively common in clinical imaging of the human eye for
diagnostic purposes.11
It has also been used for imaging
animals with relatively large eyes such as chicken and
swine.18
19
However, it has not been applied to small
animal models of retinal disease. In this study, we tested a new OCT
technology for imaging the mouse retina and correlated it with
conventional ERG and histology studies, to develop a regimen for OCT
imaging of animal models of retinal degenerative diseases. To validate
this methodology we also documented an OCT-histology-ERG correlation
occurring during degeneration of the retina in the transgenic
rd/rd/tg+ mouse
containing a normal ß-PDE transgene in the
rd/rd mouse background.20
In
addition, we tested OCT to detect retinal detachments induced by
subretinal saline injections, to test whether the technique could
monitor the success of intraocular injections and subsequent recovery
from the initial subretinal bleb.

View larger version (17K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1. Systematic diagram of the fiber-optic interferometer OCT system.
Low-coherence light from a 1300-nm superluminescent diode is coupled
into a fiber interferometer and is split by a 50-50 fiber splitter into
reference and measurement beams. The measurement beam is reflected from
internal structures within the tissue, travels back through the sample
arm and reaches the detector. Light sent into the reference arm is
collimated at the output of the reference arm fiber by a lens,
reflected from a mirror, recaptured by the lens, and recombined with
the sample arm beam. Constructive interference (thus a signal) is
observed only when the optical path length of two arms is matched
within the coherence length of the light source. By changing the
distance of the reference arm, reflected signals from different depths
within the tissue are combined and detected, whereas light from other
points within the tissue does not interfere at the detector.
|
|
 |
Materials and Methods
|
|---|
Animals and Injections
These studies adhered to the ARVO Statement for the Use of
Animals in Ophthalmic and Vision Research, as well as local government
regulations for the use of animals in ophthalmic and vision research.
Mouse strains C57BL/6J (black), BALB/CJ (albino), and C3.BliA (agouti),
and two rd mouse strains, C3H/HeJ (agouti) and SJL/J
(albino) were obtained from Jackson Laboratories (Bar Harbor, ME). An
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic strain20
was recovered from frozen embryos (a
generous gift of Janis Lem and Melvin Simon).
Phosphate-buffered saline (PBS, 1 µl) was injected into the
subretinal space of each eye with a blunt 33-gauge needle through a
28-gauge opening in the peripheral cornea under a dissecting
microscope.21
ERG Analysis
ERG recordings were performed using a visual electrodiagnostic
system (UTAS-E2000; LKC Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD). Animals were
dark adapted overnight and anesthetized before the experiment with an
intraperitoneal injection of a saline solution containing ketamine (18
mg/kg body weight) and xylazine (3 mg/kg body weight). Eyes were
dilated in dim red light with 2.5% phenylephrine solution. Small
contact lenses with gold wire loops22
were placed on each
cornea with a drop of 2.5% methylcellulose to maintain corneal
hydration. A silver wire reference electrode was placed subcutaneously
(SC) between the eyes, and a ground electrode was placed SC in a hind
leg. Full-field scotopic ERGs were elicited with 10-µsec flashes of
white light from 0.447 log candelas (cd)/sec ·
m2 to -2.8 log cd/sec ·
m2. Responses were amplified at a gain of 4000,
filtered between 0.3 and 500 Hz and digitized at a rate of 2000 Hz on
two channels. Three responses were averaged at each intensity. The
a-waves were measured from the baseline to the peak in the
cornea-negative direction, and b-waves were measured from the
cornea-negative peak to the major cornea-positive peak.
OCT Scanner
The implementation of OCT was achieved using a compact,
fiberoptic-based OCT scanner. A superluminescent diode operating at
1280 nm (
= 50 nm) provided the low coherent light source,
at a power of 2.9 mW reaching the cornea, below the American National
Standards Institute (ANSI) limit for safe ocular exposure to the
low-coherence light. The sensitivity was measured at 95 dB, by using
light reflected from an aluminum mirror. The operation of the OCT
scanner was automated and controlled by a personal computer.
Longitudinal scanning (depth of penetration into the tissue) was
achieved electronically through piezoelectric modulation of the fiber
length in the reference and sample arms of the interferometer, with a
resolution of 17 µm. This resolution was determined by measuring the
cross correlation width of the reference arm and signal arm using a
highly reflecting mirror. This value is slightly greater than that
predicted by the measured gaussian spectral bandwidth of 50 nm,
presumably because of some spectral filtering in the fiber
interferometer. XY transverse scanning (up to 1 x 1 cm) was
attained by automated bending of the tip of the optical fiber behind
the focusing lens, with a resolution of 22 µm. Single transverse
scans were accomplished in 5 seconds.
OCT Imaging and Analysis
Before OCT imaging was performed, each animal was
anesthetized and the pupils dilated. Because of the small eyes (
3 mm
diameter) and the lack of landmarks in the mouse retina, OCT scanning
was initially directed to the center (posterior pole) of the mouse eye,
facilitated by the aiming beam of the scanner. The scanning head of the
OCT unit was connected to a device that allowed two-dimensional
movement. The anesthetized mouse was placed in an adjustable holder
that could be rotated easily. For horizontal scan, the aiming laser was
directed to the center of the mouse eye in alignment with the lateral
nasal-to-temple raphe and vertical scan with superior-to-inferior
across the center of the eye. Each scan was performed at least twice,
with realignment each time. The dimension of the scan (in depth and
transverse extent) was adjusted until the optimal signal intensity and
contrast was achieved. Retinal thickness was measured from the central
retinal area of all images obtained from both horizontal and vertical
scans from the same eye, using the system software, and averaged.
The method used to extract the retinal thicknesses in the system
software was based on the fact that the photocurrent from the detection
photodiode was amplified in a logarithmic detector and digitized with
12-bit resolution. Thus, each pixel on the OCT B-scans represented one
of 4096 possible levels. Once acquired, the B-scans were linearly
filtered (9-pixel averaging). Areas of interest (AOIs) were established
based on visual inspection of the retinal layers in the B-scan. In the
AOIs, lineouts were taken of the digitized OCT B-scans, recording pixel
intensity versus position (depth). Boundaries between differing layers
were established by directly measuring the widths of features by
determining the positions where the pixel intensity reached
Imin +
(Imin +
Imax)/2, where
Imin,max are the average values of the
low and high intensity features. The group index used to convert to
physical path was 1.38. (The value for water is 1.34, which is probably
slightly less than the retina, 1.376 for cornea, 1.41 for lens, and
1.336 for aqueous humor and vitreous humor.)
Histology and Retinal Thickness Measurements
Histologic analysis of mouse retinas was performed by using
standard procedures.23
Mice were killed by
CO2 overdose and perfused intracardially with 4%
paraformaldehyde and 1% glutaraldehyde fixative after the blood was
washed out with saline. Eyes were fixed in the same fixative for 1 to 2
days and embedded in epoxy resin. Sections were cut at 1-µm thickness
along the vertical meridian and stained with toluidine blue. In some
cases, eyes were fixed in the same fixative for 2 to 4 hours and
embedded in polyester wax (EM Science, Fort Washington, PA), after
gradient ethanol dehydration and wax infiltration. Sections were cut at
8-µm thickness along the vertical meridian and stained with
hematoxylin and eosin. The retinal thickness was measured from
polyester wax embedded sections using the measurement tool of a
microscope (Axioplan 2; Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany).
 |
Results
|
|---|
Prior work (Reitze D, unpublished results,
1998)15
on ocular OCT imaging has used an 800-nm light,
primarily because the aqueousvitreous humor is more transmissive at
800 nm than at longer wavelengths. A preliminary comparison of OCT
images obtained with a 1280- versus 800-nm wavelength of light in
primate eyes revealed both decreased signal and resolution at longer
wavelength (Reitze D, unpublished observation, 1998). Although
light scattering is diminished at longer wavelengths, this advantage is
offset by an overall increased absorbency of biological material at
1280 nm and an increase in coherence length owing to the spectral
dependence of the absorbency. However, these problems are substantially
diminished in rodent eyes, owing to their relatively small diameter and
correspondingly shorter path length. Thus, we designed and built a
1280-nm OCT imaging unit to obtain high-resolution retinal structure in
the living rodent.
Features of OCT Images of the Mouse Retina
To assess the sensitivity of OCT imaging in detecting differences
in rodent retinal thickness and morphology, we used a normal and a
retinal degeneration (rd) mouse strain. To test the effect
of pigmentation on the pattern of the OCT images, we also examined
three normal mouse strains, C57BL/6J (black), BALB/CJ (albino), and
C3.BliA (agouti), and two rd mouse strains, C3H/HeJ (agouti)
and SJL/J (albino). Each animal was first tested by ERG, then by OCT,
and finally killed for retinal histology at the end of the experiment.
One of the primary applications of OCT analysis in the mouse
would be to observe structural changes in animals with degenerative
diseases of the retina. The rd mouse is a relatively
fast-degenerating model because of a mutation in the gene coding for
the ß-subunit of cGMP-phosphodiesterase
(ß-PDE).24
25
26
The outer layer of the
rd mouse retina undergoes severe degeneration beginning at
postnatal day 8. At 1 month of age, the outer (OS) and inner segments
(IS) of rod photoreceptors have nearly completely disappeared, and the
outer nuclear layer (ONL) has been reduced to a single row of nuclei
(compare Fig. 2
). Loss of photoreceptors, as expected, correlates with the complete
loss of the scotopic ERG b-wave response.

View larger version (70K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2. (A, C) Light micrographs of retinas
(top) and scotopic ERG wave forms (bottom) of
1-month-old normal (A) and rd (C)
mice. The scale bar is 50 µm. The ERG waves represent the average of
five measurements at maximum intensity. (B, D)
OCT images of the retinas of normal (left) and rd
(right) mice. The ruler scale is in millimeters. RPE,
retinal pigment epithelium; OS, outer segment; IS, inner segment; ONL,
outer nuclear layer; INL, inner nuclear layer; OPL, outer plexiform
layer; IPL, inner plexiform layer; GCL, ganglion cell layer.
|
|
By comparing OCT and histologic images, it was possible to begin
identifying the limits of the retinal layer in OCT images. OCT scan
images of normal (left) and rd (right) mouse retinas are
shown in Figures 2B and 2D
. The backscattered light intensity is
displayed in a grey-scale in which the lighter areas correspond to
regions of high relative optical reflectivity or backscattering, and
dark regions represent areas of minimal or no relative reflectivity.
The first reflective interface posterior to the lens at the top of each
image in Figures 2B
and 2E
clearly represents the anterior border of
the retina at the vitreoretinal interface. Using this OCT image
interface a starting point, it was possible to define the set of OCT
layers corresponding to the full-thickness normal retina. To aid this
assignment, we analyzed a series of normal retinas in which 1 µl PBS
was injected into the subretinal space of each mouse eye near the
posterior pole. Local regions of detached retina in OCT image allowed
us to distinguish retina from underlying RPE-choriocapillaris (Fig. 3)
. The detached retina was clearly evident in all images. The highly
reflective layer below the retina must represent the anterior border of
the choriocapillaris-retinal pigment epithelium. The detached layers
were therefore intact, full-thickness retina that had ruptured from the
injection procedure (Fig. 3)
. By virtue of being on the posterior face
of the detached retina, the photoreceptor layer could be identified as
the minimally reflective layer located in the posterior side of the
retina. This layer was quite evident in the intact retinas seen in
Figures 2B
and 2D
as the nearly nonreflective layer adjacent to the
RPE-choriocapillaris.

View larger version (88K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3. OCT images of mouse retinal detachments. Three normal mouse eyes
(A, B, C) were injected subretinally
with 1 µl PBS and scanned horizontally (top) and
vertically (bottom). Arrows: subretinal space.
|
|
This interpretation is consistent with the assignment and
appearance of the photoreceptor layer in the primate retina according
to Peiroth et al.27
It has been reported that there are
four pseudocolored bands in OCT images of human extrafoveal retina. The
innermost band is thought to correlate with the retinal nerve fiber
layer (RNFL) at the vitreous interface, and the outermost band is
thought to be a function of the retinal pigment epithelium
(RPE)-choriocapillaris complex. The middle two bands in the human
retina are thought to correspond to the inner plexiform layer (IPL) and
outer plexiform layer (OPL), respectively.10
28
29
30
31
However assigning these reflective regions to specific histologic
landmarks has been controversial because of difficulties in resolving
the various components of the OCT images. In the OCT images of the
normal mouse retina (Figs. 2B
4
at higher magnification), these two reported middle bands are not
evident. Instead, there is one additional low-reflection region that
divides the anterior part into two bands that clearly are not IPL and
OPL. This entire band is substantially thinned in the images of
rd mouse retina after the photoreceptor layers have been
lost (Figs. 2D
4)
, confirming its assignment as the combined
inner and outer retina. We also compared OCT retinal images from albino
and pigmented mice and found no difference in the pattern of reflective
layers as a function of pigmentation (data not shown).

View larger version (50K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4. High-magnification light micrograph and OCT image of a normal
(top) and 1-month-old
rd/rd (bottom) retina
aligning with identification of the retinal layers. The OCT images were
displayed in brown color scale in which the bright
colors correspond to regions of high relative optical reflectivity
or backscattering, and dim colors represent areas of minimal
or no relative reflectivity. Note that OCT images are inverted relative
to those in Figures 2
and 3
. The scale of the OCT image is not same as
the scale bar. See Figure 2
for abbreviations. Scale bar, 50
µm.
|
|
Quantitative OCT Analysis of a Degenerative Mouse Retina
In contrast to the rapid retinal degeneration of the rd
mouse, the transgenic
rd/rd/tg+ mouse,
initially reported to be rescued from retinal
degeneration,20
in fact loses retinal function over a more
protracted period (John G. Flannery and Janis Lem, personal
communication, 1997). We sought both to validate the application of OCT
for monitoring retinal changes in the mouse and, in parallel, to
document the time course of this "slow" retinal degeneration by
observing photoreceptor layer thinning as the transgenic
rd/rd/tg+ mouse
ages. At 1 month, the retinas of
rd/rd/tg+ mice
have apparently normal morphology and scotopic ERG responses. We
observed progressive retinal degeneration beginning at approximately 8
weeks, with reduction of the ONL to one to two rows of nuclei or less
by 3 to 4 months (Fig. 5A) . There was some variation among animals in the rate of degeneration,
even among littermates, perhaps due to differences in transgene copy
number or ambient light conditions. The relatively slow retinal
degeneration in this
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic mouse line compared with the rd/rd
mouse better mimics human retinitis pigmentosa (RP), suggesting that
this transgenic mouse may be a valuable animal model for studying
retinal degenerations due to mutations in the ß-PDE gene
and for developing therapeutic interventions.


View larger version (200K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5. (A) Light micrographs of retinal sections (taken from the
central retina) from
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic mice at different ages. Layers labeled are the same as in
Figure 2
. (B) OCT images of the retinas of
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic mice at same ages as those shown in Figure 6A
.
|
|
Using the
rd/rd/tg+ model,
we quantitated the relationship between cross-sectional OCT images and
scotopic ERG signal amplitudes. Measurements of retinal thickness were
obtained directly from tomograms by measuring the distance between the
inner and outer retinal boundaries. Images were not postprocessed,
except for filtering and smoothing to facilitate the measurements. For
simple comparison among mice at different stages of retinal
degeneration, the average retinal thickness in the central 1 mm of the
retina was used. Horizontal and vertical scans from both eyes over this
region were measured and averaged for each animal. The
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic mice from 4 up to 16 weeks old were observed with ERG and
OCT measurements. Retinal histology was also obtained at 4, 6, 8, 10,
12, 14, and 16 weeks of age after ERG and OCT measurements. The
thickness of the normal mouse retina measured by OCT is 220 to 250
µm. In a 1-month-old rd/rd mouse, the retinal
thickness is reduced to 140 to 160 µm because of complete loss of the
OS and IS of the rod photoreceptors and more than 90% thinning of the
ONL by this age. Retinal thickness measured from fixed sections of the
normal mice is approximately 107 ± 5 µm. All the measurements
were performed from polyester-embedded sections as described in the
Materials and Methods. Retinal thickness values are different from the
ones seen in plastic embedded sections as shown in micrographs (Figs. 2A
2C
4
5A) , due to shorter fixation time and extensive tissue
shrinkage during dehydration and wax infiltration process. In the adult
rd/rd mouse, the thickness is reduced to
approximately 55 ± 2.5 µm. In the transgenic
rd/rd/tg+ mouse,
the progressive loss of photoreceptors, and thus the thinning of the
retinal layer, can be detected by OCT imaging (Fig. 5B)
. The time
course of retinal degeneration in
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic mice measured by full-field scotopic b-wave ERG amplitude
(Fig. 6A)
and retinal thickness changes measured from fixed sections
(Fig. 6B)
and OCT images (Fig. 6C)
are shown in Figures 6A
6B
and 6C
.
A comparison between the retinal thickness measured from fixed sections
and OCT images is shown in Figure 6D
. When normalized to the same
values at 4 weeks of age, there was no statistically significant
difference between the OCT thickness measurements and histologic
retinal thickness at any stage of degeneration from 6 to 16 weeks of
age (Fig. 6D)
. Because retinal degeneration in the
rd/rd/tg+ mice
is due to loss of photoreceptors, when the percentage of reduction in
photoreceptor layer (OS, IS, and ONL, instead of the entire retinal
thickness) was calculated, there was also agreement between
photoreceptor layer thickness measurements (fixed sections or OCT
images) and ERG amplitude (Fig. 6E)
. Thus, although the fine retinal
structures remained difficult to resolve in OCT images, overall changes
in the retinal thickness were easily determined by OCT and reflected
well the loss in retinal function measured by ERG in these transgenic
mice.

View larger version (33K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6. (A) Bar graphs of scotopic ERG b wave amplitudes of
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic mice at different ages. Each data point represents the mean
value from 5 animals. (B) Bar graphs of retinal thickness
measured from fixed, polyester wax embedded sections of
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic mice at different ages. Retinal thickness values are
different from the ones seen in plastic embedded sections shown in
Figs. 2A
2C
4
5A
, due to shorter fixation time and extensive tissue
shrinkage during dehydration and wax infiltration process. Each data
point is averaged from measurements of 5 eyes taken from the central
retina of
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic mice at different ages. (C) Bar graphs of retinal
thickness measured from OCT images as described in Methods. Each data
point represents mean value of 6 eyes, each of which is averaged from 4
independent scans. (D) Comparison between retinal thickness
measured from fixed sections and OCT images of
rd/rd/tg+
transgenic mice at different ages. Each data point on the plot is same
as described in Figure 5B
-C
(E) Percentage of reduction of
scotopic b-wave ERG amplitude and photoreceptor layer thickness
measured from fixed sections and OCT images of
rd/rd/tg+ mice
at different ages. Values of each type of measurement in 4 week old
mice were taken as 100%. The photoreceptor layer thickness was
determined by using the ratio between photoreceptor and entire retinal
thickness at 4 weeks in
rd/rd/tg+ mice from the
fixed sections to calculate the percentage of photoreceptor layer
change of the OCT images at later ages.
|
|
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
In the current study, OCT imaging with a 1280-nm scanner was
applicable to the mouse retina. The technique is noninvasive, rapid
(full retinal scans took <5 seconds each) and there was a good
correlation between the retinal thickness measured by OCT and by
retinal histology. In addition, losses in ERG amplitude agreed
extremely well with OCT monitoring of retinal thinning in a mouse model
of degenerative retinal disease.
OCT imaging has several important advantages over other imaging
technologies and conventional histologic studies. First, it is
noninvasive, and the same specimen can therefore be monitored over a
prolonged period to observe changes in morphology in the same animal.
Second, OCT is an in vivo technique, measuring tissue structures under
living conditions, and it therefore does not suffer from artifactual
changes in tissue morphology associated with histologic sample
preparation. Third, it is sufficiently sensitive to detect relatively
small changes in the retinal thickness (±20 µm). Fourth, OCT
scanning and image acquisition is very fast and relatively inexpensive,
and results can be obtained easily from a large number of animals
within a period comparing very favorably to lengthy histologic
procedures. Fifth, OCT images are digitized and therefore are
inherently quantifiable for statistical analysis. Finally, OCT imaging
and standard ERG analysis can be performed sequentially (ERG first) on
the same animal, thus allowing essentially simultaneous documentation
of retinal structure and physiology in the living animal.
There remain some disadvantages to OCT imaging of small retinas. First,
the resolution of our current OCT system does not allow a direct
comparison of retinal substructures with that obtained by histology.
Whereas retinal histology displays definitive boundaries at high
resolution between layers due to distinct cellular interfaces, such
details are not as well resolved with OCT imaging at the power levels
and spatial resolution currently achievable. This problem is at least
partially attributable to the relatively small changes in
layer-to-layer scattering coefficients. However, laser-based OCT
imaging has recently demonstrated retinal imaging with less than 3-µm
resolution,32
33
potentially overcoming this limitation.
Second, the propagation of light within tissue is strongly affected by
its scattering properties. The intensity and contrast of retinal
imaging is severely attenuated by even minor corneal opacity,
cataracts, and other diseases that may be present in the anterior
segment of the eye. Third, although OCT images are digitized and thus
quantifiable, the precise location of tissue boundaries in OCT images
can be difficult to accurately define. We are currently evaluating the
use of an additional lens on the cornea to improve the OCT image of
this region. However, when observing retinal degeneration in animals
that progresses to complete or nearly complete loss of photoreceptors,
the approximately 50- to 100-µm retinal thinning that ensues can be
easily and reproducibly monitored. In addition, the readily
visualization of retinal detachment using OCT scanning makes it an
extremely useful way to detect any disease or structural alterations
associated with subretinal surgical procedures, thus allowing rapid
evaluation of the success of subretinal injection of therapeutic or/and
experimental reagents.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Supported by National Institutes of Health Grants EY07864, EY11123,
EY11596, and NS36303, and grants from The Foundation Fighting
Blindness, Macular Vision Research Foundation, and Research to Prevent
Blindness Inc.
Submitted for publication January 10, 2001; revised June 19, 2001;
accepted July 26, 2001.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page
charge payment. This article must therefore be marked
"advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734
solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Qiuhong Li, Department of Ophthalmology, Box
100284, JHMHSC, University of Florida, College of Medicine,
Gainesville, FL 32610. qli{at}eye1.eye.ufl.edu
 |
References
|
|---|
-
Farber, DB, Flannery, JG, Bowes, C (1994) The rd mouse story: seventy years of research on an animal model of inherited retinal degeneration Prog Retinal Eye Res 13,31-64 Pergamon Press, Ltd London.
-
Hauswirth, WW, Timmers, AM (2000) The eyes have it Mol Med Today 6,51-53[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Ali, RR, Reichel, MB, Hunt, DM, Bhattacharya, SS (1997) Gene therapy for inherited retinal degeneration Br J Ophthalmol 81,795-801[Free Full Text]
-
Bennett, J, Tanabe, T, Sun, D, et al (1996) Photoreceptor cell rescue in retinal degeneration (rd) mice by in vivo gene therapy Nat Med 2,649-654[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Lewin, AS, Drenser, KA, Hauswirth, WW, et al (1998) Ribozyme rescue of photoreceptor cells in a transgenic rat model of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa (published correction appears in Nat Med. 1998;4:1081) Nat Med 4,967-971[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
LaVail, MM, Yasumura, D, Matthes, MT, et al (1998) Protection of mouse photoreceptors by survival factors in retinal degenerations Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 39,592-602[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Hauswirth, WW, Beaufrere, L. (2000) Ocular gene therapy: quo vadis? Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 41,2821-2826[Free Full Text]
-
Frederick, J, Bronson, JD, Baehr, W. (2000) Animal models of inherited retinal diseases Methods Enzymol 316,515-526[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Petersen-Jones, SM (1998) Animal models of human retinal dystrophies Eye 12,566-570
-
Huang, D, Swanson, EA, Lin, CP, et al (1991) Optical coherence tomography Science 254,1178-1181[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Puliafito, CA, Hee, MR, Schuman, JS, Fujimoto, J (1996) Optical Coherence Tomography of Ocular Diseases Slack, Inc Thorofare, NJ.
-
Fujimoto, JG, Bouma, B, Tearney, GJ, et al (1998) New technology for high-speed and high-resolution optical coherence tomography Ann N Y Acad Sci 838,95-107[Free Full Text]
-
Fujimoto, JG, Brezinski, ME, Tearney, GJ, et al (1995) Optical biopsy and imaging using optical coherence tomography Nat Med 1,970-972[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Boppart, SA, Bouma, BE, Pitris, C, Southern, JF, Brezinski, ME, Fujimoto, JG (1998) In vivo cellular optical coherence tomography imaging Nat Med 4,861-865[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Roper, SN, Moores, MD, Gelikonov, GV, et al (1998) In vivo detection of experimentally induced cortical dysgenesis in the adult rat neocortex using optical coherence tomography J Neurosci Methods 80,91-98[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Fujimoto, JG, Pitris, C, Boppart, SA, Brezinski, ME (2000) Optical coherence tomography: an emerging technology for biomedical imaging and optical biopsy Neoplasia 2,9-25[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Tearney, GJ, Brezinski, ME, Bouma, BE, et al (1997) In vivo endoscopic optical biopsy with optical coherence tomography Science 276,2037-2039[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Huang, Y, Cideciyan, AV, Papastergiou, GI, et al (1998) Relation of optical coherence tomography to microanatomy in normal and rd chickens Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 39,2405-2416[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Huang, Y, Cideciyan, AV, Aleman, TS, et al (2000) Optical coherence tomography (OCT) abnormalities in rhodopsin mutant transgenic swine with retinal degeneration Exp Eye Res 70,247-251[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Lem, J, Flannery, JG, Li, T, Applebury, ML, Farber, DB, Simon, MI (1992) Retinal degeneration is rescued in transgenic rd mice by expression of the cGMP phosphodiesterase beta subunit Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 89,4422-4426[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Timmers, A, Zhang, H, Squitieri, A, Gonzalez-Pola, C. (2001) Subretinal injections in rodent eyes: effects on electrophysiology and histology of rat retina Mol Vis 7,131-137[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Bayer, AU, Mittag, T, Cook, P, Brodie, SE, Podos, SM, Maag, K-P. (2000) Comparisons of the amplituded size and the reproducibility of three different electrodes to record the corneal flash electroretinogram in rodents Doc Ophthalmol 98,233-246
-
Carter-Dawson, LD, LaVail, MM (1979) Rods and cones in the mouse retina. I: structural analysis using light and electron microscopy J Comp Neurol 188,245-262[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Farber, DB, Bowes, C, Danciger, M. (1991) Studies leading to the isolation of a cDNA for the gene causing retinal degeneration in the rd mouse Prog Clin Biol Res 362,67-86[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Bowes, C, Li, T, Danciger, M, Baxter, LC, Applebury, ML, Farber, DB (1990) Retinal degeneration in the rd mouse is caused by a defect in the beta subunit of rod cGMP-phosphodiesterase Nature 347,677-680[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Pittler, SJ, Baehr, W. (1991) Identification of a nonsense mutation in the rod photoreceptor cGMP phosphodiesterase beta-subunit gene of the rd mouse Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 88,8322-8326[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Pieroth, L, Schuman, JS, Hertzmark, E, et al (1999) Evaluation of focal defects of the nerve fiber layer using optical coherence tomography Ophthalmology 106,570-579[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Schuman, JS, Hee, MR, Puliafito, CA, et al (1995) Quantification of nerve fiber layer thickness in normal and glaucomatous eyes using optical coherence tomography Arch Ophthalmol 113,586-596[Abstract]
-
Schuman, JS, Pedut-Kloizman, T, Hertzmark, E, et al (1996) Reproducibility of nerve fiber layer thickness measurements using optical coherence tomography Ophthalmology 103,1889-1898[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Hee, MR, Izatt, JA, Swanson, EA, et al (1995) Optical coherence tomography of the human retina Arch Ophthalmol 113,325-332[Abstract]
-
Toth, CA, Narayan, DG, Boppart, SA, et al (1997) A comparison of retinal morphology viewed by optical coherence tomography and by light microscopy (published correction appears in Arch
Ophthalmol. 1998;116:77) Arch Ophthalmol 115,1425-1428[Abstract]
-
Drexler, W, Morgner, U, Kartner, FX, et al (1999) In Vivo ultrahigh resolution optical coherence tomography Opt Lett 24,1221-1223[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
-
Drexler, W, Morgner, U, Ghanta, RK, Kartner, FX, Schuman, JS, Fujimoto, JG (2001) Ultrahigh-resolution ophthalmic optical coherence tomography Nat Med 7,502-507[Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
T. Sugita, M. Kondo, C.-H. Piao, Y. Ito, and H. Terasaki
Correlation between Macular Volume and Focal Macular Electroretinogram in Patients with Retinitis Pigmentosa
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
August 1, 2008;
49(8):
3551 - 3558.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. de Seze, F. Blanc, L. Jeanjean, H. Zephir, P. Labauge, M. Bouyon, L. Ballonzoli, G. Castelnovo, M. Fleury, S. Defoort, et al.
Optical Coherence Tomography in Neuromyelitis Optica
Arch Neurol,
July 1, 2008;
65(7):
920 - 923.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. Ruggeri, H. Wehbe, S. Jiao, G. Gregori, M. E. Jockovich, A. Hackam, Y. Duan, and C. A. Puliafito
In Vivo Three-Dimensional High-Resolution Imaging of Rodent Retina with Spectral-Domain Optical Coherence Tomography
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
April 1, 2007;
48(4):
1808 - 1814.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
O. P. Kocaoglu, S. R. Uhlhorn, E. Hernandez, R. A. Juarez, R. Will, J.-M. Parel, and F. Manns
Simultaneous Fundus Imaging and Optical Coherence Tomography of the Mouse Retina
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
March 1, 2007;
48(3):
1283 - 1289.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
V. J. Srinivasan, T. H. Ko, M. Wojtkowski, M. Carvalho, A. Clermont, S.-E. Bursell, Q. H. Song, J. Lem, J. S. Duker, J. S. Schuman, et al.
Noninvasive Volumetric Imaging and Morphometry of the Rodent Retina with High-Speed, Ultrahigh-Resolution Optical Coherence Tomography
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
December 1, 2006;
47(12):
5522 - 5528.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. J. K. Derwent, L. Padnick-Silver, M. McRipley, E. Giuliano, R. A. Linsenmeier, and K. Narfstrom
The electroretinogram components in abyssinian cats with hereditary retinal degeneration.
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
August 1, 2006;
47(8):
3673 - 3682.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. A. Sandberg, R. J. Brockhurst, A. R. Gaudio, and E. L. Berson
The Association between Visual Acuity and Central Retinal Thickness in Retinitis Pigmentosa
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
September 1, 2005;
46(9):
3349 - 3354.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
T. M. Muanza, A. P. Cotrim, M. McAuliffe, A. L. Sowers, B. J. Baum, J. A. Cook, F. Feldchtein, P. Amazeen, C. N. Coleman, and J. B. Mitchell
Evaluation of Radiation-Induced Oral Mucositis by Optical Coherence Tomography
Clin. Cancer Res.,
July 15, 2005;
11(14):
5121 - 5127.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. Gloesmann, B. Hermann, C. Schubert, H. Sattmann, P. K. Ahnelt, and W. Drexler
Histologic Correlation of Pig Retina Radial Stratification with Ultrahigh-Resolution Optical Coherence Tomography
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
April 1, 2003;
44(4):
1696 - 1703.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
B. Rohrer, P. Goletz, S. Znoiko, Z. Ablonczy, J.-x. Ma, T. M. Redmond, and R. K. Crouch
Correlation of Regenerable Opsin with Rod ERG Signal in Rpe65-/- Mice during Development and Aging
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.,
January 1, 2003;
44(1):
310 - 315.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|