by DE Croft, CC Wykoff, DM Brown, van Hemert, J and M Verhoek
Abstract:
Advances in imaging periodically lead to dramatic changes in the diagnosis, management, and study of retinal disease. For example, the innovation and wide-spread application of fluorescein angiography and optical coherence tomography (OCT) have had tremendous impact on the management of retinal disorders.1,2 Recently, ultra-widefield (UWF) imaging has opened a new window into the retina, allowing the capture of greater than 80% of the fundus with a single shot.3 With montaging, much of the remaining retinal surface area can be captured.4,5 However, to maximize the potential of these new modalities, accurate quantification of the pathology they capture is critical.
Reference:
Quantification of Ultra-Widefield Retinal Images (DE Croft, CC Wykoff, DM Brown, van Hemert, J and M Verhoek), In Retina Today, 2014.
Bibtex Entry:
@article{CroftWykoff2014ef,
abstract = {Advances in imaging periodically lead to dramatic changes in the diagnosis, management, and study of retinal disease. For example, the innovation and wide-spread application of fluorescein angiography and optical coherence tomography (OCT) have had tremendous impact on the management of retinal disorders.1,2 Recently, ultra-widefield (UWF) imaging has opened a new window into the retina, allowing the capture of greater than 80% of the fundus with a single shot.3 With montaging, much of the remaining retinal surface area can be captured.4,5 However, to maximize the potential of these new modalities, accurate quantification of the pathology they capture is critical.},
author = {DE Croft and CC Wykoff and DM Brown and van Hemert, J and M Verhoek},
date-added = {2014-06-20 15:24:32 +0000},
date-modified = {2014-06-20 15:24:32 +0000},
journal = {Retina Today},
keywords = {retinal imaging; medical},
title = {Quantification of Ultra-Widefield Retinal Images},
year = {2014}}