Ultra–Short-Term Reproducibility of Speckle-Noise Freed Fluid and Tissue Compartmentalization of the Choroid Analyzed by Standard OCT
Author(s) -
Peter M. Maloca,
Cyrill Gyger,
Andreas Schoetzau,
Pascal W. Hasler
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
translational vision science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.508
H-Index - 21
ISSN - 2164-2591
DOI - 10.1167/tvst.4.6.3
Subject(s) - reproducibility , medicine , choroid , ophthalmology , confidence interval , intraclass correlation , tissue fluid , nuclear medicine , pathology , chemistry , physics , optics , retina , chromatography
We measured reproducibility of speckle-noise freed fluid and tissue compartmentalization of the choroid (choroidal angiography and tissue characterization).This study included 26 eyes of 13 healthy females: 13 were used for repeated measurements and 13 were used for side comparison. A semiautomated algorithm removed speckle-noise with structure preservation.Intraclass correlation (ICC), with respect to reproducibility of the method, showed an ICC for choroidal fluid inner space analysis (FISA) of 95.15% (90.01-98.24). The ICC of tissue inner space analysis (TISA) was 99.75% (99.47-99.91). The total choroid ratio (TCR), calculated from volumes of tissue to vessels, showed an ICC of 88.84% (78.28-95.82). Comparison of eyes (left to right) showed a difference for FISA of 0.033 (95% confidence interval [CI] -0.0018-0.0680, P = 0.063), TISA -0.118 (CI -0.2373-0.0023, P = 0.055), and TCR -0.590 (CI -0.9047 to -0.2754, P = 0.004). The ICC for FISA and TISA showed a trend in the difference comparing left and right eyes; however, TCR showed a significant difference between the eyes in the measured area (P < 0.001). Mean overall FISA was 0.58 mm(3) (range, 0.25-0.98 mm(3), SD = 0.14). Mean TISA was 3.45 mm(3) (range, 2.38-5.0 mm(3), SD 0.072). Mean TCR was 6.13 (overall range, 3.93-10.2, SD = 1.34).Differences in choroidal layers between subjects were found mainly due to alterations in choroidal tissue. Reproducibility of speckle-noise freed choroidal angiography appeared excellent.Speckle noise is a granular "noise" that appears in a wide range of medical imaging methods as ultrasonography, magnetic resonance, computer tomography, or optical coherence tomography (OCT). Findings from basic science about speckle noise were translated into a novel, medical image postprocessing application that can separate signal from speckle noise with structure preservation with high reproducibility and enhance medical imaging.
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