High-Precision Optical Coherence Tomography Navigated Laser Retinopexy for Retinal Breaks.

Salzmann S; Wakili P; Al-Nawaiseh S; Považay B; Meier C; Burri C

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

The prevalent cause of retinal detachment is a full-thickness retinal break and the ingress of fluid into the subretinal space. To prevent progression of the detachment, laser photocoagulation (LPC) lesions are placed around the break in clinical practice to seal the tissue. Unlike the usual application under indirect ophthalmoscopy, we developed a semi-automatic treatment planning software based on a sequence of optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans to perform navigated LPC treatment. The depth information allows demarcation of the border where the neurosensory retina is still attached to the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), which is critical for prevention of detachment progression. To evaluate the method, artificially provoked retinal breaks were treated in seven ex-vivo porcine eyes. Treatment outcome was assessed by fundus photography and OCT imaging. The automatically applied lesions surrounding each detachment (4.4-39.6 mm2) could be identified as highly scattering coagulation regions in color fundus photography and OCT. Between the planned and applied pattern, a mean offset of 68 µm (SD ± 16.5 µm) and a mean lesion spacing error of 5 µm (SD ± 10 µm) was achieved. The results demonstrate the potential of navigated OCT-guided laser retinopexy to improve overall treatment accuracy, efficiency, and safety.

Details about the publication

JournalLife (Basel)
Volume13
Issue5
StatusPublished
Release year2023 (09/05/2023)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.3390/life13051145
Keywords LPC; OCT; guided laser; photocoagulation; retinal detachment prophylaxis; retinal tear

Authors from the University of Münster

Al-Nawaiseh, Sami
Clinic for Ophthalmology