4.7 Article

Blind Source Separation of Retinal Pulsatile Patterns in Optic Nerve Head Video-Recordings

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MEDICAL IMAGING
Volume 40, Issue 3, Pages 852-864

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMI.2020.3039917

Keywords

Retina; Hemodynamics; Biomedical optical imaging; Integrated optics; Veins; Optical imaging; Blood; Blind source separation; ICA; independent component analysis; optic nerve head; PCA; principal component analysis; retina; video-ophthalmoscopy; spontaneous venous pulsations

Funding

  1. Brno University of Technology [FEKT-S-17-4487]
  2. Czech Health Research Council [NV17-29452A]
  3. Department of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Dynamic optical imaging of retinal hemodynamics is an evolving technique in vision and eye-disease research, with video-recording capturing distinct functional phenomena. The use of blind source separation as an automated localizer of temporally synchronized hemodynamics in retina video-imaging has shown promising results, with the detection of reproducible areas and reduction of noise in patterns' dynamics through post-processing methods. The study also revealed differences in phase shifts between different dynamic patterns and detected low frequency oscillations possibly related to respiratory effects in the time-courses of the recordings.
Dynamic optical imaging of retinal hemodynamics is a rapidly evolving technique in vision and eye-disease research. Video-recording, which may be readily accessible and affordable, captures several distinct functional phenomena such as the spontaneous venous pulsations (SVP) of central vein or local arterial blood supply etc. These phenomena display specific dynamic patterns that have been detected using manual or semi-automated methods. We propose a pioneering concept in retina video-imaging using blind source separation (BSS) serving as an automated localizer of distinct areas with temporally synchronized hemodynamics. The feasibility of BSS techniques (such as spatial principal component analysis and spatial independent component analysis) and K-means based post-processing method were successfully tested on the monocular and binocular video-ophthalmoscopic (VO) recordings of optic nerve head (ONH) in healthy subjects. BSSs automatically detected three spatially distinct reproducible areas, i.e. SVP, optic cup pulsations (OCP) that included areas of larger vessels in the nasal part of ONH, and other pulsations (OP). The K-means post-processing reduced a spike noise from the patterns' dynamics while high linear dependence between the non-filtered and post-processed signals was preserved. Although the dynamics of all patterns were heart rate related, the morphology analysis demonstrated significant phase shifts between SVP and OCP, and between SVP and OP. In addition, we detected low frequency oscillations that may represent respiratory-induced effects in time-courses of the VO recordings.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available