A program to analyse optical coherence tomography images of the ciliary muscle


Autoria(s): Laughton, Deborah S.; Coldrick, Benjamin J.; Sheppard, Amy L.; Davies, Leon N.
Data(s)

01/12/2015

Resumo

Purpose: To describe and validate bespoke software designed to extract morphometric data from ciliary muscle Visante Anterior Segment Optical Coherence Tomography (AS-OCT) images. Method: Initially, to ensure the software was capable of appropriately applying tiered refractive index corrections and accurately measuring orthogonal and oblique parameters, 5 sets of custom-made rigid gas-permeable lenses aligned to simulate the sclera and ciliary muscle were imaged by the Visante AS-OCT and were analysed by the software. Human temporal ciliary muscle data from 50 participants extracted via the internal Visante AS-OCT caliper method and the software were compared. The repeatability of the software was also investigated by imaging the temporal ciliary muscle of 10 participants on 2 occasions. Results: The mean difference between the software and the absolute thickness measurements of the rigid gas-permeable lenses were not statistically significantly different from 0 (t = -1.458, p = 0.151). Good correspondence was observed between human ciliary muscle measurements obtained by the software and the internal Visante AS-OCT calipers (maximum thickness t = -0.864, p = 0.392, total length t = 0.860, p = 0.394). The software extracted highly repeatable ciliary muscle measurements (variability ≤6% of mean value). Conclusion: The bespoke software is capable of extracting accurate and repeatable ciliary muscle measurements and is suitable for analysing large data sets.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/26256/1/Program_to_analyse_optical_coherence_tomography_images_of_the_ciliary_muscle.pdf

Laughton, Deborah S.; Coldrick, Benjamin J.; Sheppard, Amy L. and Davies, Leon N. (2015). A program to analyse optical coherence tomography images of the ciliary muscle. Contact Lens and Anterior Eye, 38 (6), pp. 402-408.

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/26256/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed