Characteristics of the human isoplanatic patch and implications for adaptive optics retinal imaging

P Bedggood, M Daaboul, R Ashman… - … of biomedical optics, 2008 - spiedigitallibrary.org
P Bedggood, M Daaboul, R Ashman, G Smith, A Metha
Journal of biomedical optics, 2008spiedigitallibrary.org
Conventional adaptive optics enables correction of high-order aberrations of the eye, but
only for a single retinal point. When imaging extended regions of the retina, aberrations
increase away from this point and degrade image quality. The zone over which aberrations
do not change significantly is called the “isoplanatic patch.” Literature concerning the human
isoplanatic patch is incomplete. We determine foveal isoplanatic patch characteristics by
performing Hartmann-Shack aberrometry in 1 deg increments in 8 directions on 7 human …
Conventional adaptive optics enables correction of high-order aberrations of the eye, but only for a single retinal point. When imaging extended regions of the retina, aberrations increase away from this point and degrade image quality. The zone over which aberrations do not change significantly is called the “isoplanatic patch.” Literature concerning the human isoplanatic patch is incomplete. We determine foveal isoplanatic patch characteristics by performing Hartmann-Shack aberrometry in increments in 8 directions on 7 human eyes. Using these measurements, we establish the correction quality required to yield at least 80% of the potential patch size for a given eye. Single-point correction systems (conventional adaptive optics) and multiple-point correction systems (multiconjugate adaptive optics) are simulated. Results are compared to a model eye. Using the Maréchal criterion for 555-nm light, average isoplanatic patch diameter for our subjects is . The required order of aberration correction depends on desired image quality over the patch. For the more realistically achievable criterion of root mean square (rms) wavefront error over a 6.0-mm pupil, correction to at least sixth order is recommended for all adaptive optics systems. The most important aberrations to target for a multiconjugate correction are defocus, astigmatism, and coma.
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