"We have found a way to better control the path of light to and from the fundus of the eye. This is a fairly simple idea, but it works fantastically. By using a long multimode fiber, we can illuminate a sample with several hundred laser beams that do not interact with each other because they are time delayed. Thanks to this we can non-invasively "slice" our sample in the computer but with the same image quality as in a very good brightfield microscope. We can now distinguish, differentiate and examine the individual layers of the cornea on computer screens, with full accuracy, just as if we were looking through a real microscope...” - affirms the leader of this research, ICTER's Chair prof. Maciej Wojtkowski.
In their study “Multimode fiber enables control of spatial coherence in Fourier-domain full-field optical coherence tomography for in vivo corneal imaging” published in an Optics Letters’ journal, the authors Egidijus Auksorius, Dawid Borycki and Maciej Wojtkowski describe how they reached this result: by using a laser light to illuminate the eye in a way which has never been tried before.Because of its physical properties, laser is much more sensitive and registers more information about its travel inside the eye, than white light. The difficulty the scientist struggled with, until this research has succeeded, was the over-sensitivity of the laser light. It simply delivered an excessive amount of data obtained from the light scattering, making it difficult to isolate the exact clean image, when the beam travelled across every layer of the cornea.
By using multimode fiber like a tunnel with several hundred lanes, Auksorius, Borycki and Wojtkowski sent the beam through a 300-meters distance small core optical fiber, in order to eliminate the “junk data”. Thanks to the long distance, the different laser modes generated in the fiber did not connect nor “talked” with each other, therefore they were “cross-talk-free”, producing an effect denominated spatial coherence reduction. As a result, the laser beam reached all the eye layers in un undisturbed journey, delivering an ultrafast in vivo volumetric imaging of the human cornea, without causing risk to the retina.
The finding is indeed stunning in its simplicity and effectiveness. By physically extending the laser light illuminating the eye, the scientists have exponentially improved the precision of the cornea imaging, using a non invasive, non-contact and no-anestesia required method. Applied in Ophthalmology, this finding will enable doctors to microscopically observe every layer of the patient’s cornea in order to improve the diagnosis, without having to recur to painful interventional procedures.
MEDICA-tradefair.com; Source: International Centre for Translational eye Research (ICTER)