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Dive into the research topics where Flora Hui is active.

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Featured researches published by Flora Hui.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Quantitative spatial and temporal analysis of fluorescein angiography dynamics in the eye.

Flora Hui; Christine T. O. Nguyen; Phillip Bedggood; Zheng He; Rebecca L. Fish; Rachel Gurrell; Algis J. Vingrys; Bang V. Bui

Purpose We describe a novel approach to analyze fluorescein angiography to investigate fluorescein flow dynamics in the rat posterior retina as well as identify abnormal areas following laser photocoagulation. Methods Experiments were undertaken in adult Long Evans rats. Using a rodent retinal camera, videos were acquired at 30 frames per second for 30 seconds following intravenous introduction of sodium fluorescein in a group of control animals (n = 14). Videos were image registered and analyzed using principle components analysis across all pixels in the field. This returns fluorescence intensity profiles from which, the half-rise (time to 50% brightness), half-fall (time for 50% decay) back to an offset (plateau level of fluorescence). We applied this analysis to video fluorescein angiography data collected 30 minutes following laser photocoagulation in a separate group of rats (n = 7). Results Pixel-by-pixel analysis of video angiography clearly delineates differences in the temporal profiles of arteries, veins and capillaries in the posterior retina. We find no difference in half-rise, half-fall or offset amongst the four quadrants (inferior, nasal, superior, temporal). We also found little difference with eccentricity. By expressing the parameters at each pixel as a function of the number of standard deviation from the average of the entire field, we could clearly identify the spatial extent of the laser injury. Conclusions This simple registration and analysis provides a way to monitor the size of vascular injury, to highlight areas of subtle vascular leakage and to quantify vascular dynamics not possible using current fluorescein angiography approaches. This can be applied in both laboratory and clinical settings for in vivo dynamic fluorescent imaging of vasculature.


Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2017

Retinal biomarkers provide “insight” into cortical pharmacology and disease

Christine T. O. Nguyen; Flora Hui; Jason Charng; Shajan Velaedan; Anna K. van Koeverden; Jeremiah K. H. Lim; Zheng He; Vickie H. Y. Wong; Algis J. Vingrys; Bang V. Bui; Magnus Ivarsson

&NA; The retina is an easily accessible out‐pouching of the central nervous system (CNS) and thus lends itself to being a biomarker of the brain. More specifically, the presence of neuronal, vascular and blood‐neural barrier parallels in the eye and brain coupled with fast and inexpensive methods to quantify retinal changes make ocular biomarkers an attractive option. This includes its utility as a biomarker for a number of cerebrovascular diseases as well as a drug pharmacology and safety biomarker for the CNS. It is a rapidly emerging field, with some areas well established, such as stroke risk and multiple sclerosis, whereas others are still in development (Alzheimers, Parkinsons, psychological disease and cortical diabetic dysfunction). The current applications and future potential of retinal biomarkers, including potential ways to improve their sensitivity and specificity are discussed. This review summarises the existing literature and provides a perspective on the strength of current retinal biomarkers and their future potential.


Translational Vision Science & Technology | 2016

Photopic Negative Response Obtained Using a Handheld Electroretinogram Device: Determining the Optimal Measure and Repeatability

Zhichao Wu; Xavier Hadoux; Flora Hui; Marc Sarossy; Jonathan G. Crowston

Purpose To determine the measure of the photopic negative response (PhNR) of the full-field electroretinogram (ERG) that exhibits the optimal level of test-retest repeatability, and examine its repeatability under different conditions using a handheld, nonmydriatic ERG system and self-adhering skin electrodes. Methods Multiple ERG recordings (using 200 sweeps each) were performed in both eyes of 20 normal participants at two different sessions to compare its coefficient of repeatability (CoR; where 95% of the test-retest difference is expected to lie) between different PhNR measures and under different testing conditions (within and between examiners, and between sessions). Results The ratio between the PhNR trough to b-wave peak and b-wave peak to a-wave trough amplitude (PhNR/B ratio) exhibited the lowest CoR relative to its effective dynamic range (30 ± 4%) when including three recordings. There were no significant changes in the PhNR/B ratio over seven measurements (4 right and 3 left eyes) at either session (P ≥ 0.100), or significant difference in its CoR between different testing conditions (P = 0.314). Conclusion The PhNR/B ratio was the measure that minimized variability, and its measurements using a novel handheld ERG system with self-adhering skin electrodes and the protocols described in this study were comparable under different testing conditions and over multiple recordings. Translational Relevance The PhNR can be measured for clinical and research purposes using a simple-to-implement technique that is consistent within and between visits, and also between examiners.


Progress in Retinal and Eye Research | 2018

The coma in glaucoma: Retinal ganglion cell dysfunction and recovery

L E Fry; Eamonn T. Fahy; Vicki Chrysostomou; Flora Hui; Jessica Tang; Peter van Wijngaarden; Steven Petrou; Jonathan G. Crowston

ABSTRACT Retinal ganglion cell (RGC) degeneration causes vision loss in patients with glaucoma, and this has been generally considered to be irreversible due to RGC death. We question this assertion and summarise accumulating evidence that points to visual function improving in glaucoma patients with treatment, particularly in the early stages of disease. We propose that prior to death, RGCs enter periods of dysfunction but can recover with relief of RGC stress. We first summarise the clinical evidence for vision improvement in glaucoma and then detail our experimental work that points to the underlying processes that underpin clinical improvement. We show that functional recovery can occur following a prolonged course of RGC dysfunction and demonstrate how the capacity for recovery can be modified. Detecting RGC dysfunction and augmenting recovery of such ‘comatosed’ RGCs holds clinical potential to improve early detection of glaucoma and improve visual function. HIGHLIGHTSAccumulating evidence suggests visual function may improve with IOP lowering in glaucoma.Retinal ganglion cells (RGC) may enter a dysfunctional ‘comatose’ state prior to cell death.RGC function may be recoverable with IOP lowering, and the rate of recovery can be enhanced.Identification of dysfunctional RGCs offers potential for early glaucoma detection and recovery of vision.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2017

Retinal and Cortical Blood Flow Dynamics Following Systemic Blood-Neural Barrier Disruption

Flora Hui; Christine T. O. Nguyen; Zheng He; Algis J. Vingrys; Rachel Gurrell; Rebecca L. Fish; Bang V. Bui

To consider whether imaging retinal vasculature may be used as a marker for cortical vessels, we compared fluorescein angiography flow dynamics before and after pharmacological disruption of blood-neural barriers. Sodium fluorescein (1%, 200 μl/kg) was intravenously delivered in anesthetized adult Long Evans rats (n = 44, brain = 18, retina = 26). In the brain cohort, a cranial window was created to allow direct visualization of surface cortical vessels. Video fluorescein angiography was captured using a rodent retinal camera at 30 frames/second and fluorescence intensity profiles were evaluated for the time to reach 50% brightness (half-rise), 50% decay (half-fall), and the plateau level of remnant fluorescence (offset, %). Cortical vessels fluoresced earlier (artery half-rise: 5.6 ± 0.2 s) and decayed faster (half-fall: 10.3 ± 0.2 s) compared to retinal vasculature. Cortical vessels also had a considerably higher offset, particularly in the capillaries/extravascular space (41.4 ± 2.7%) whereas pigment in the retina reduces such residual fluorescence. In a sub-cohort of animals, sodium deoxycholate (DOC, 0.06 M dissolved in sterile saline, 1 mL) was delivered intravenously to cause simultaneous disruption of the blood-brain and blood-retinal barriers. A separate group received saline as vehicle control. Fluorescein angiography was re-measured at 6 and 24 h after drug infusion and evaluated by comparing flow dynamics to the upper quartile (75%) of the control group. Retinal vasculature was more sensitive to DOC-induced disruption with a higher fluorescence offset at 6 h (47.3 ± 10.6%). A delayed effect was seen in cortical vessels with a higher offset evident only at 24 h (65.6 ± 10.1%). Here we have developed a method to quantitatively compare fluorescein angiography dynamics in the retina and superficial cortical vessels. Our results show that systemic disruption of blood-neural barriers causes vascular leakage in both tissues but earlier in the retina suggesting that pharmacological blood-neural barrier disruption may be detected earlier in the eye than in cortical vasculature.


Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics | 2015

Chronic intraocular pressure elevation impairs autoregulatory capacity in streptozotocin‐induced diabetic rat retina

Vickie H. Y. Wong; James A. Armitage; Zheng He; Flora Hui; Algis J. Vingrys; Bang V. Bui

To assess ocular blood flow responses to acute IOP stress following 4 weeks of chronic IOP elevation in streptozotocin (STZ)‐induced diabetic and control rats. We hypothesise that chronic IOP elevation for 4 weeks will further impair blood flow regulation in STZ‐induced diabetic rats eyes.


Translational Vision Science & Technology | 2018

Baseline Detrending for the Photopic Negative Response

Jessica Tang; Flora Hui; Michael Coote; Jonathan G. Crowston; Xavier Hadoux

Purpose The photopic negative response (PhNR) of the light-adapted electroretinogram (ERG) holds promise as an objective marker of retinal ganglion cell function. We compared baseline detrending methods to improve PhNR repeatability without compromising its diagnostic ability in glaucoma. Methods Photopic ERGs were recorded in 20 glaucoma and 18 age-matched control participants. A total of 50 brief, red-flashes (1.6 cd.s/m2) on a blue background (10 photopic cd/m2) were delivered using the RETeval device. Detrending methods compared were: (1) increasing the high-pass filter from 1 to 10 Hz and (2) estimating and removing the trend with an increasing polynomial (order from 1–10) applied to the prestimulus interval, prestimulus and postsignal interval, or the whole ERG signal. Coefficient of repeatability (COR%), unpaired Students t-test, and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) were used to compare the detrending methods. Results Most detrending methods improved PhNR test–retest repeatability compared to the International Society for Clinical Electrophysiology of Vision (ISCEV) recommended 0.3 to 300 Hz band-pass filter (COR% ± 200%). In particular, detrending with a polynomial (order 3) applied to the whole signal performed the best (COR% ± 44%) while achieving similar diagnostic ability as ISCEV band-pass (AUC 0.74 vs. 0.75, respectively). However, over-correcting with higher orders of processing can cause waveform distortion and reduce diagnostic ability. Conclusions Baseline detrending can improve the PhNR repeatability without compromising its clinical use in glaucoma. Further studies exploring more complex processing methods are encouraged. Translational Relevance Baseline detrending can significantly improve the quality of the PhNR.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2016

Blood-neural-barrier disruption has different effects on fluorescein angiography dynamics in the eye and brain

Flora Hui; Christine T. O. Nguyen; Zheng He; Rachel Gurrell; Rebecca L. Fish; Algis J. Vingrys; Bang V. Bui


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2016

The relationship between retinal blood flow, neuronal function and glia in the early diabetic retina,

Samuel A. Mills; Andrew I. Jobling; Bang V. Bui; Zheng He; Ursula Greferath; Joe Wang; Flora Hui; Erica L. Fletcher


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Quantitative spatial and temporal analysis of fluorescein angiography in rat retina

Flora Hui; Phillip Bedggood; Christine T. O. Nguyen; Zheng He; Selwyn M. Prea; Rebecca L. Fish; Rachel Gurrell; Algis J. Vingrys; Bang V. Bui

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Bang V. Bui

University of Melbourne

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Zheng He

University of Melbourne

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Jessica Tang

University of Melbourne

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