4.6 Article

Non-Rigid Registration for High-Resolution Retinal Imaging

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 13, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics13132285

Keywords

adaptive optics; retinal disease; scanning laser ophthalmoscopy

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Adaptive optics improves resolution in ophthalmic imaging for identifying, counting, and mapping retinal microstructures. Small patches can be registered using cross-correlation, but larger images require more sophisticated techniques. We have applied a non-rigid registration technique to compensate for local image deformations, resulting in improved definition of retinal microstructures. Evaluation of derived metrics can facilitate early diagnostics of retinal diseases.
Adaptive optics provides improved resolution in ophthalmic imaging when retinal microstructures need to be identified, counted, and mapped. In general, multiple images are averaged to improve the signal-to-noise ratio or analyzed for temporal dynamics. Image registration by cross-correlation is straightforward for small patches; however, larger images require more sophisticated registration techniques. Strip-based registration has been used successfully for photoreceptor mosaic alignment in small patches; however, if the deformations along strips are not simple displacements, averaging can degrade the final image. We have applied a non-rigid registration technique that improves the quality of processed images for mapping cones over large image patches. In this approach, correction of local deformations compensates for local image stretching, compressing, bending, and twisting due to a number of causes. The main result of this procedure is improved definition of retinal microstructures that can be better identified and segmented. Derived metrics such as cone density, wall-to-lumen ratio, and quantification of structural modification of blood vessel walls have diagnostic value in many retinal diseases, including diabetic retinopathy and age-related macular degeneration, and their improved evaluations may facilitate early diagnostics of retinal diseases.

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