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Dynamic Change of Amplitude for OCT Functional Imaging

Published 28 Nov 2023 in physics.med-ph, eess.IV, and physics.optics | (2311.17090v1)

Abstract: Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is capable of non-destructively obtaining cross-sectional information of samples with micrometer spatial resolution, which plays an important role in ophthalmology and endovascular medicine. Measuring OCT amplitude can obtain three-dimensional structural information of the sample, such as the layered structure of the retina, but is of limited use for functional information such as tissue specificity, blood flow, and mechanical properties. OCT functional imaging techniques based on other optical field properties including phase, polarization state, and wavelength have emerged, such as Doppler OCT, optical coherence elastography, polarization-sensitive OCT, and visible-light OCT. Among them, functional imaging techniques based on dynamic changes of amplitude have significant robustness and complexity advantages, and achieved significant clinical success in label-free blood flow imaging. In addition, dynamic light scattering OCT for 3D blood flow velocity measurement, dynamic OCT with the ability to display label-free tissue/cell specificity, and OCT thermometry for monitoring the temperature field of thermophysical treatments are the frontiers in OCT functional imaging. In this paper, the principles and applications of the above technologies are summarized, the remaining technical challenges are analyzed, and the future development is envisioned.

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