Quantitative optical coherence tomography reveals rod photoreceptor degeneration in early diabetic retinopathy
David Le, Taeyoon Son, Jennifer I. Lim, and Xincheng Yao

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that quantitative optical coherence tomography (OCT) can detect early rod photoreceptor abnormalities in diabetic retinopathy, revealing specific outer retinal changes before clinical symptoms appear.
Contribution
The paper introduces a quantitative OCT approach to identify rod-predominant photoreceptor degeneration in early diabetic retinopathy, providing new insights into early disease detection.
Findings
Photoreceptor abnormalities are detectable in early diabetic retinopathy.
Rod photoreceptor degeneration is predominant in early DR.
Quantitative OCT features reveal outer retinal changes before clinical symptoms.
Abstract
Purpose: This study is to test the feasibility of optical coherence tomography (OCT) detection of photoreceptor abnormality and to verify the photoreceptor abnormality is rod predominated in early DR . Methods: OCT images were acquired from normal eyes, diabetic eyes with no diabetic retinopathy (NoDR) and mild DR. Quantitative features, including length features quantifying band distances and reflectance intensity features among the external limiting membrane (ELM), inner segment ellipsoid (ISe), interdigitation zone (IZ) and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) were determined. Comparative OCT analysis of central fovea, parafovea and perifovea were implemented to verify the photoreceptor abnormality is rod predominated in early DR. Results: Length abnormalities between the ISe and IZ also showed a decreasing trend among cohorts. Reflectance abnormalities of the ELM, IZ and ISe were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRetinal Diseases and Treatments · Retinal Imaging and Analysis · Retinal Development and Disorders
