TY - JOUR
T1 - Reproducibility of tear meniscus measurement by Fourier-domain optical coherence tomography
T2 - A pilot study
AU - Zhou, Sheng
AU - Li, Yan
AU - Lu, Ake Tzu Hui
AU - Liu, Pengfei
AU - Tang, Maolong
AU - Yiu, Samuel C.
AU - Huang, David
PY - 2009/9
Y1 - 2009/9
N2 - ■ BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: To study the reproducibility of tear meniscus measurement with high-speed high-resolution Fourier-domain optical coherence tomography (FD-OCT). ■ PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty normal participants were enrolled in this prospective study. The lower tear meniscus in the right eye of each subject was imaged by vertical scans centered on the inferior cornea and the lower eyelid using an FD-OCT system (RTVue; Optovue, Inc., Fremont, CA) with a corneal adaptor. The system performs 26,000 axial scans per second and has a 5-micron axial resolution. Each subject was examined at two visits 30 to 60 days apart. Each eye was scanned twice on each visit. The scans were taken 2 seconds after a blink. The lower meniscus height, depth, and cornea-meniscus angle were measured with a computer caliper. The cross-sectional area was calculated using a two-triangle approximation. ■ RESULTS: The between-visits coefficient of variation was 17.5%, 18.0%, 35.5%, and 12.2% for meniscus height, depth, area, and angle, respectively. The intraclass correlations for these parameters were 0.605, 0.558, 0.567, and 0.367, respectively. ■ CONCLUSION: FD-OCT measures lower tear meniscus dimensions and area with higher betweenvisits reproducibility than previous OCT instruments. FD-OCT may be a useful way to measure dry eye severity and treatment effectiveness.
AB - ■ BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: To study the reproducibility of tear meniscus measurement with high-speed high-resolution Fourier-domain optical coherence tomography (FD-OCT). ■ PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty normal participants were enrolled in this prospective study. The lower tear meniscus in the right eye of each subject was imaged by vertical scans centered on the inferior cornea and the lower eyelid using an FD-OCT system (RTVue; Optovue, Inc., Fremont, CA) with a corneal adaptor. The system performs 26,000 axial scans per second and has a 5-micron axial resolution. Each subject was examined at two visits 30 to 60 days apart. Each eye was scanned twice on each visit. The scans were taken 2 seconds after a blink. The lower meniscus height, depth, and cornea-meniscus angle were measured with a computer caliper. The cross-sectional area was calculated using a two-triangle approximation. ■ RESULTS: The between-visits coefficient of variation was 17.5%, 18.0%, 35.5%, and 12.2% for meniscus height, depth, area, and angle, respectively. The intraclass correlations for these parameters were 0.605, 0.558, 0.567, and 0.367, respectively. ■ CONCLUSION: FD-OCT measures lower tear meniscus dimensions and area with higher betweenvisits reproducibility than previous OCT instruments. FD-OCT may be a useful way to measure dry eye severity and treatment effectiveness.
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U2 - 10.3928/15428877-20090901-01
DO - 10.3928/15428877-20090901-01
M3 - Article
C2 - 19772266
AN - SCOPUS:70449723394
SN - 2325-8160
VL - 40
SP - 442
EP - 447
JO - Ophthalmic Surgery and Lasers
JF - Ophthalmic Surgery and Lasers
IS - 5
ER -