Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is an imaging modality that acquires high‐resolution cross‐sectional images of living tissues and it has become the standard in ophthalmological diagnoses. However, most quantitative morphological measurements are based on the raw OCT images which are distorted by several mechanisms such as the refraction of probe light in the sample and the scan geometries and thus the analysis of the raw OCT images inevitably induced calculation errors. In this paper, based on Fermat's principle and the concept of inverse light tracing, image distortions due to refraction occurred at tissue boundaries in the whole‐eye OCT imaging of mouse by telecentric scanning were corrected. Specially, the mathematical correction models were deducted for each interface, and the high‐precision whole‐eye image was recovered segment by segment. We conducted phantom and in vivo experiments on mouse and human eyes to verify the distortion correction algorithm, and several parameters of the radius of curvature, thickness of tissues and error, were calculated to quantitatively evaluate the images. Experimental results demonstrated that the method can provide accurate and reliable measurements of whole‐eye parameters and thus be a valuable tool for the research and clinical diagnosis.
Myopia is a significant cause of visual impairment which may lead to many complications. However, the understanding of the mechanisms of myopia is still limited. In this paper, in order to investigate the development and the treatment of myopia, we analyzed the biological structure parameters of mice eyes, obtained from optical coherence tomography (OCT), and the optical performance of mice eyes calculated using ZEMAX software (ZEMAX Development Corporation, Kirkland, WA, USA) in which the optical model was built on the segment-by-segment optically corrected OCT 3D-images. Time-serial evaluation of three groups of mice eyes (form-deprivation myopia mice eyes, normal mice eyes, and atropine-treated myopia mice eyes) was performed. In addition to the biological structure parameters, imaging performance with the development of root-mean-square wavefront aberration at six filed angles was compared and analyzed. Results show that the biological structure parameters of the eye are closely related to the development of myopia. The peripheral defocus of the retina has a significant impact on inducing myopia, which verifies the new theory of myopia development. The delaying effect of atropine solution on myopia development is shown to verify the therapeutic effect of the medicine. This study provides technical support for the investigation of the myopia mechanism.
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