Robert Wolfe
University of Rochester
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Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2009
Jessica I. W. Morgan; Alfredo Dubra; Robert Wolfe; William H. Merigan; David R. Williams
PURPOSE Retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells are critical for the health of the retina, especially the photoreceptors. A recent study demonstrated that individual RPE cells could be imaged in macaque in vivo by detecting autofluorescence with an adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscope (AOSLO). The current study extended this method to image RPE cells in fixating humans in vivo and to quantify the RPE mosaic characteristics in the central retina of normal humans and macaques. METHODS The retina was imaged simultaneously with two light channels in a fluorescence AOSLO; one channel was used for reflectance imaging of the cones while the other detected RPE autofluorescence. The excitation light was 568 nm, and emission was detected over a 40-nm range centered at 624 nm. Reflectance frames were registered to determine interframe eye motion, the motion was corrected in the simultaneously recorded autofluorescence frames, and the autofluorescence frames were averaged to give the final RPE mosaic image. RESULTS In vivo imaging demonstrated that with increasing eccentricity, RPE cell density, and mosaic regularity decreased, whereas RPE cell size and spacing increased. Repeat measurements of the same retinal location 42 days apart showed the same RPE cells and distribution. CONCLUSIONS The RPE cell mosaic has been resolved for the first time in alert fixating human subjects in vivo using AOSLO. Mosaic analysis provides a quantitative database for studying normal and diseased RPE in vivo. This technique will allow longitudinal studies to track disease progression and assess treatment efficacy in patients and animal models of retinal disease.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2008
Jessica I. W. Morgan; Jennifer J. Hunter; Benjamin Masella; Robert Wolfe; Daniel C. Gray; William H. Merigan; François C. Delori; David R. Williams
PURPOSE Autofluorescence fundus imaging using an adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscope (AOSLO) allows for imaging of individual retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells in vivo. In this study, the potential of retinal damage was investigated by using radiant exposure levels that are 2 to 150 times those used for routine imaging. METHODS Macaque retinas were imaged in vivo with a fluorescence AOSLO. The retina was exposed to 568- or 830-nm light for 15 minutes at various intensities over a square (1/2) degrees per side. Pre- and immediate postexposure images of the photoreceptors and RPE cells were taken over a 2 degrees field. Long-term AOSLO imaging was performed intermittently from 5 to 165 days after exposure. Exposures delivered over a uniform field were also investigated. RESULTS Exposures to 568-nm light caused an immediate decrease in autofluorescence of RPE cells. Follow-up imaging revealed either full recovery of autofluorescence or long-term damage in the RPE cells at the exposure. The outcomes of AOSLO exposures and uniform field exposures of equal average power were not significantly different. No effects from 830-nm exposures were observed. CONCLUSIONS The study revealed a novel change in RPE autofluorescence induced by 568-nm light exposure. Retinal damage occurred as a direct result of total average power, independent of the light-delivery METHOD Because the exposures were near or below permissible levels in laser safety standards, these results suggest that caution should be used with exposure of the retina to visible light and that the safety standards should be re-evaluated for these exposure conditions.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2008
Daniel C. Gray; Robert Wolfe; Bernard P. Gee; Drew Scoles; Ying Geng; Benjamin Masella; Alfredo Dubra; Sergio Oscar Luque; David R. Williams; William H. Merigan
PURPOSE The extent to which the fine structure of single ganglion cells, such as dendrites and axons, can be resolved in retinal images obtained from the living primate eye was investigated. METHODS Macaque retinal ganglion cells were labeled with retrograde transport of rhodamine dextran injected into the lateral geniculate nucleus. Fluorescence images of the ganglion cells were obtained in vivo with an adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscope. RESULTS Axons and dendritic arborization could be resolved in primate retinal ganglion cells in vivo, comparing favorably in detail with ex vivo confocal images of the same cells. The full width at half maximum of the transverse line spread function (LSF) was 1.6 microm, and that of the axial point spread function (PSF) was 115 microm. The axial positional accuracy of fluorescence-labeled objects was approximately 4 microm. CONCLUSIONS This in vivo method applied to ganglion cells demonstrates that structures smaller than the somas of typical retinal cells can be accessible in living eyes. Similar approaches may be applied to image other relatively transparent retinal structures, providing a potentially valuable tool for microscopic examination of the normal and diseased living retina.
BMC Ophthalmology | 2009
Drew Scoles; Daniel C. Gray; Jennifer J. Hunter; Robert Wolfe; Bernard P. Gee; Ying Geng; Benjamin Masella; Richard T. Libby; Stephen R. Russell; David R. Williams; William H. Merigan
BackgroundAlthough it has been suggested that alterations of nerve fiber layer vasculature may be involved in the etiology of eye diseases, including glaucoma, it has not been possible to examine this vasculature in-vivo. This report describes a novel imaging method, fluorescence adaptive optics (FAO) scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (SLO), that makes possible for the first time in-vivo imaging of this vasculature in the living macaque, comparing in-vivo and ex-vivo imaging of this vascular bed.MethodsWe injected sodium fluorescein intravenously in two macaque monkeys while imaging the retina with an FAO-SLO. An argon laser provided the 488 nm excitation source for fluorescence imaging. Reflectance images, obtained simultaneously with near infrared light, permitted precise surface registration of individual frames of the fluorescence imaging. In-vivo imaging was then compared to ex-vivo confocal microscopy of the same tissue.ResultsSuperficial focus (innermost retina) at all depths within the NFL revealed a vasculature with extremely long capillaries, thin walls, little variation in caliber and parallel-linked structure oriented parallel to the NFL axons, typical of the radial peripapillary capillaries (RPCs). However, at a deeper focus beneath the NFL, (toward outer retina) the polygonal pattern typical of the ganglion cell layer (inner) and outer retinal vasculature was seen. These distinguishing patterns were also seen on histological examination of the same retinas. Furthermore, the thickness of the RPC beds and the caliber of individual RPCs determined by imaging closely matched that measured in histological sections.ConclusionThis robust method demonstrates in-vivo, high-resolution, confocal imaging of the vasculature through the full thickness of the NFL in the living macaque, in precise agreement with histology. FAO provides a new tool to examine possible primary or secondary role of the nerve fiber layer vasculature in retinal vascular disorders and other eye diseases, such as glaucoma.
Archive | 1992
Robert Wolfe; Lester G. Finney
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2007
Jessica I. W. Morgan; Daniel C. Gray; Robert Wolfe; Benjamin Masella; Alfredo Dubra; David R. Williams
Journal of Vision | 2010
Ying Geng; Jason Porter; Kenneth P. Greenberg; Robert Wolfe; Daniel C. Gray; Jennifer J. Hunter; Alfredo Dubra; Benjamin D. Masella; John G. Flannery; David R. Williams
Journal of Vision | 2010
Jessica I. W. Morgan; Jennifer J. Hunter; Benjamin Masella; Robert Wolfe; William H. Merigan; David R. Williams
Journal of Vision | 2010
Jessica I. W. Morgan; Daniel C. Gray; Alfredo Dubra; Robert Wolfe; Bernard P. Gee; William H. Merigan; Christy Sheehy; Benjamin Masella; David R. Williams
Journal of Vision | 2010
Hunter; Jessica I. W. Morgan; Robert Wolfe; Janet R. Sparrow; David R. Williams