American Journal of Ophthalmology
Volume 149, Issue 4 , Pages 641-650, April 2010

Observations by Spectral-Domain Optical Coherence Tomography Combined with Simultaneous Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscopy: Imaging of the Vitreous

Department of Ophthalmology, Shiley Eye Center, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California

Accepted 11 November 2009. published online 08 February 2010.

Purpose

To determine the ability to detect normal vitreous structure, evolving posterior vitreous detachment (PVD), and related vitreoretinal changes with combined spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) and scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (SLO).

Design

Observational cross-sectional study.

Methods

Simultaneous SD-OCT and SLO imaging instruments (SD-OCT/SLO) were used to image both eyes of patients with symptoms of PVD. The vitreous cortex, preretinal lacunae, hyaloid, and its relations to the retinal surface were analyzed. In addition, ultrasound was performed in a subset of patients to determine the stage of PVD.

Results

Two-hundred two eyes of 113 subjects were scanned. There was a high correlation between diagnosis of complete PVD by clinical examination and OCT (95 vs 93 eyes, respectively; κ, 0.82). A partial PVD was detected more frequently by SD-OCT/SLO than by biomicroscopy examination (45 vs 7 eyes; P < .0001). Ultrasound was performed in a subset of 30 eyes. A high agreement was found between ultrasound and SD-OCT/SLO results for both complete PVD (κ, 0.933) and incomplete PVD (κ, 0.91). Vitreous cortex was detected in 181 eyes, and posterior precortical vitreous pocket was detected in 85 eyes. The effects of PVD, including vitreoretinal traction, paravascular lamellar holes, and fine changes at the fovea, could be visualized reliably in detail only with SD-OCT/SLO. In all these eyes, SD-OCT/SLO allowed improved visualization of the vitreoretinal relationship.

Conclusions

SD-OCT/SLO provides unprecedented in vivo information about the physiologic and pathologic vitreous structure; it allows an extremely detailed analysis of the vitreoretinal interface, and it is particularly useful for defining focal changes and PVD.

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PII: S0002-9394(09)00879-4

doi:10.1016/j.ajo.2009.11.016

American Journal of Ophthalmology
Volume 149, Issue 4 , Pages 641-650, April 2010