Transscleral Optical Phase Imaging of the Human Retina - TOPI
Timoth\'e Laforest, Mathieu K\"unzi, Laura Kowalczuk, Dino Carpentras,, Francine Behar-Cohen, Christophe Moser

TL;DR
The paper introduces TOPI, a novel transscleral optical phase imaging method that enables high-contrast, high-resolution in vivo imaging of retinal cells, including deep layers, within seconds, surpassing limitations of existing OCT and adaptive optics techniques.
Contribution
TOPI is a new imaging technique that uses high-angle oblique illumination and adaptive optics to visualize retinal cells at various depths in vivo with rapid acquisition.
Findings
Successfully imaged retinal cells in vivo in humans and ex vivo in tissues.
Achieved imaging of cells up to the RPE layer within 9 seconds.
Demonstrated capability to image pericytes and microglia around rat retinal capillaries.
Abstract
The in vivo observation of the human retina at the cellular level is crucial to detect lesions before irreversible visual loss occurs, to follow the time course of retinal diseases and to evaluate and monitor the early effects of treatments. Despite the phenomenal advances in optical coherence tomography (OCT) and adaptive optics systems, in vivo imaging of several retinal cells is still elusive. Here we propose a radically different method compared to OCT, called transscleral optical phase imaging (TOPI), which allows to image retinal cells with high contrast, high resolution, and within an acquisition time suitable for clinical use. TOPI relies on high-angle oblique illumination of the retina, combined with adaptive optics, to enhance the phase contrast of transparent cells. We first present in-vivo images of retinal cells, from the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) to the nerve and…
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