Volume-rendered optical coherence tomography angiography during ocular interventions: Advocating for noninvasive intraoperative retinal perfusion monitoring

February 11, 2026
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AUTHORS

Tim J Enz, Peter M Maloca, Markus Tschopp, Marcel N Menke, James R Tribble, Pete A Williams, Nadja Inglin, Ulrike Steitz, Hendrik P N Scholl, Anthia Papazoglou

J Biophotonics. 2022 Dec;15(12):e202200169. doi: 10.1002/jbio.202200169. Epub 2022 Sep 11.

ABSTRACT

We aimed to test for feasibility of volume-rendered optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) as a novel method for assessing/quantifying retinal vasculature during ocular procedures and to explore the potential for intraoperative use. Thirty patients undergoing periocular anaesthesia were enrolled, since published evidence suggests a reduction in ocular blood flow. Retinal perfusion was monitored based on planar OCTA image-derived data provided by a standard quantification algorithm and postprocessed/volume-rendered OCTA data using a custom software script. Overall, imaging procedures were successful, yet imaging artifacts occurred frequently. In interventional eyes, perfusion parameters decreased during anaesthesia. Planar image-derived and volume rendering-derived parameters were correlated. No correlation was found between perfusion parameters and a motion artifact score developed for this study, yet all perfusion parameters correlated with signal strength as displayed by the device. Concluding, volume-rendered OCTA allows for noninvasive three-dimensional retinal vasculature assessment/quantification in challenging surgical settings and appears generally feasible for intraoperative use.

PMID:36089335 | DOI:10.1002/jbio.202200169

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