Purpose: To demonstrate that high-seed, ultra-high-resolution spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) technology can image in vivo fine morphological features in the healthy and pathological human limbus.
Methods: A compact, fiberoptic SD-OCT system was developed for imaging the human limbus. It combines ∼1.5-µm isotropic spatial resolution in ocular tissue and an acquisition rate of 250,000 A-scans per second. The imaging probe was outfitted with two microscope objectives to provide flexibility in the choice of wide field of view and extended depth of focus versus high lateral resolution. The clinical potential of the system was evaluated by imaging subjects with limbal stem cell dysfunction (LSCD; n = 4) and healthy controls (n = 6).
Results: Limbus images acquired from the healthy controls showed normal cellular structure of the limbal crypts, palisades of Vogt (POVs), and vasculature of the underlying scleral tissue. Images acquired from the LSCD subjects showed distortions or absence of POVs, invasion of highly scattering conjunctival tissue over the limbal and peripheral corneal epithelium, scarring and thinning of the limbal epithelium, and neovascularization.
Conclusions: The combination of high OCT spatial resolution and rapid image acquisition rate allows for in vivo, contactless, volumetric visualization of fine morphological details that could be beneficial for the precise diagnosis and grading of LSCD, planning of treatment, and evaluation of the effectiveness of the treatment approaches.
Translational relevance: The OCT technology described here could improve the clinical diagnostics and grading of LSCD, preoperative planning, and postoperative evaluation of LSCD subjects, in addition to monitoring the effectiveness of various LSCD treatments.