Light-adapted flicker optoretinograms captured with a spatio-temporal optical coherence-tomography (STOC-T) system.
Sławomir TomczewskiPiotr WęgrzynDawid BoryckiEgidijus AuksoriusMaciej WojtkowskiAndrea CuratoloPublished in: Biomedical optics express (2022)
For many years electroretinography (ERG) has been used for obtaining information about the retinal physiological function. More recently, a new technique called optoretinography (ORG) has been developed. In one form of this technique, the physiological response of retinal photoreceptors to visible light, resulting in a nanometric photoreceptor optical path length change, is measured by phase-sensitive optical coherence tomography (OCT). To date, a limited number of studies with phase-based ORG measured the retinal response to a flickering light stimulation. In this work, we use a spatio-temporal optical coherence tomography (STOC-T) system to capture optoretinograms with a flickering stimulus over a 1.7 × 0.85 mm 2 area of a light-adapted retina located between the fovea and the optic nerve. We show that we can detect statistically-significant differences in the photoreceptor optical path length (OPL) modulation amplitudes in response to different flicker frequencies and with better signal to noise ratios (SNRs) than for a dark-adapted eye. We also demonstrate the ability to spatially map such response to a patterned stimulus with light stripes flickering at different frequencies, highlighting the prospect of characterizing the spatially-resolved temporal-frequency response of the retina with ORG.