NEW TECHNOLOGY AT MIAMI EYE CENTER
Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010
When your headlights flash an animal in the road you see the bright orange reflex of light from the retina (pictured to the left). While that was man’s first image of the interior of the eye the view is now down to the microscopic level. The device which makes that possible is Optical Coherence Tomography or OCT. We can visualize early and subtle changes in the retina and optic nerve in many cases before they are noticed by the individual.
How is this done? The patient is seated before the OCT machine and waves of safe invisible ultraviolet light are beamed into the eye. The light is reflected back just as it is with the headlight. The reflected light is captured by a sensing devise (interferometer) and passed along to a computer which interprets the variations in the reflection as various anatomic parts of the retina and optic nerve.
Anatomic Details of the Retina The complex structure of the retina, pictured here, passes the visual information along its nerves to the Optic Nerve which in turn feeds the image to the brain. All this processing takes about 2/10ths of a second. Needless to say, small anatomic problems in the retina can cause big problems with the vision. So it becomes important to view the anatomic changes asssociated with disease early in their evolution. This can also be said about diseases of the Optic Nerve such as glaucoma.OCT Image of the Retina
To the practiced ophthalmologist, the image to the right represents all the layers of the retina in sideways view. One can see early signs of macula degeneration, swelling due to diabetes or other circulatory problems as well as impending holes.











