Purpose: To explore the contribution of crystalline lens fluorescence to fluorescence lifetimes measured with fluorescence lifetime imaging ophthalmoscopy (FLIO) and to propose a computational model to reduce the lens influence.
Methods: FLIO, which detects autofluorescence decay over time in a short-wavelength spectral channel (SSC, 498-560 nm) and a long-wavelength spectral channel (LSC, 560-720 nm), was performed on 32 patients before and after cataract extraction. The mean autofluorescence lifetime (τ ) of the fundus was determined from a three-exponential fit of the postoperative fluorescence decays. The preoperative measurements were fit with series of exponential functions in which one fluorescence component was time-shifted in order to represent lens fluorescence.
Results: Postoperatively, τ was 185 ± 22 ps in the SSC and 209 ± 34 ps in the LSC at the posterior pole. These values were best reproduced by fitting the postoperative measurements with a three-exponential model with a time-shifted third fluorescence component (SSC, 203 ± 45 ps; LSC, 215 ± 29 ps), whereas disregarding time-shifted lens fluorescence resulted in significantly ( < 0.001) longer τ values (SSC, 474 ± 206 ps; LSC, 215 ± 29 ps). The fluorescence of the cataract lens contributed to the total fluorescence by 54.2 ± 10.6% (SSC) and 29.5 ± 9.9% (LSC).
Conclusions: Cataract lens fluorescence greatly alters fluorescence lifetimes measured at the fundus by FLIO, resulting in an overestimation of the lifetimes; however, this may be compensated for considerably by taking lens influence into account in the fitting model.
Translational Relevance: This study investigates cataract fluorescence in FLIO and a mathematical model for compensation of this influence.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7422756 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/tvst.9.8.13 | DOI Listing |
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