Wide-field fundus imaging with trans-palpebral illumination

Devrim Toslak, Damber Thapa, Yanjun Chen, Muhammet Kazim Erol, R V Paul Chan, Xincheng Yao, Devrim Toslak, Damber Thapa, Yanjun Chen, Muhammet Kazim Erol, R V Paul Chan, Xincheng Yao

Abstract

In conventional fundus imaging devices, transpupillary illumination is used for illuminating the inside of the eye. In this method, the illumination light is directed into the posterior segment of the eye through the cornea and passes the pupillary area. As a result of sharing the pupillary area for the illumination beam and observation path, pupil dilation is typically necessary for wide-angle fundus examination, and the field of view is inherently limited. An alternative approach is to deliver light from the sclera. It is possible to image a wider retinal area with transcleral-illumination. However, the requirement of physical contact between the illumination probe and the sclera is a drawback of this method. We report here trans-palpebral illumination as a new method to deliver the light through the upper eyelid (palpebra). For this study, we used a 1.5 mm diameter fiber with a warm white LED light source. To illuminate the inside of the eye, the fiber illuminator was placed at the location corresponding to the pars plana region. A custom designed optical system was attached to a digital camera for retinal imaging. The optical system contained a 90 diopter ophthalmic lens and a 25 diopter relay lens. The ophthalmic lens collected light coming from the posterior of the eye and formed an aerial image between the ophthalmic and relay lenses. The aerial image was captured by the camera through the relay lens. An adequate illumination level was obtained to capture wide angle fundus images within ocular safety limits, defined by the ISO 15004-2: 2007 standard. This novel trans-palpebral illumination approach enables wide-angle fundus photography without eyeball contact and pupil dilation.

Keywords: Fundus examination; fundus camera; ophthalmoscopy; pars plana; retinal imaging; transscleral illumination; wide-field.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Anatomical illustration of the pars plana
Figure 2
Figure 2
Schematic diagram of the trans-palpebral illumination imaging system
Figure 3
Figure 3
Fundus image captured from a subject who had no ocular pathology
Figure 4
Figure 4
Near infrared (a) and color (b) fundus images captured from a subject who had a choroidal nevus with drusen.

Source: PubMed

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