Adaptive Optics for Vision Science

Chapter 9 - Retinal Imaging Applications

Fundamental Properties of the Retina

ANN E. ELSNER
Schepens Eye Research Institute and Harvard Medical School,
Boston, Massachusetts

Retinal imaging is constrained by the fundamental properties of the retina,
the thin, transparent layer of neural tissue that initiates a visual signal at the
back of the eye and transmits this visual information toward the brain. New
light-tissue interactions are revealed with each advancement in imaging technology.
This chapter first lays out the main anatomical structures and general
topography of the retina, those features immediately observed with traditional
instrumentation in the living human eye. Next, the two blood supplies,
which place constraints on both anatomy and imaging, are described. Then
the details of the smaller divisions and cell types within layers are covered.
Next, there is a discussion of spectra and features in detail, as might be
encountered in imaging, and finally there are details of light-tissue interactions
that may be useful for imaging studies.

The diagram in Figure 9.1 shows the relative locations of several of the
main features of a normal retina in relation to the eye, with the three main
layers comprising the globe being the retina, the choroid, and the sclera. The
retina subserving vision for the central 20° of visual angle is illustrated by a
dark box. The retina is not flat, nor is it a smooth hollow sphere that follows
the inside of the globe. Instead, the retina varies in thickness and elevation,
according to key anatomical features, pathological conditions, and changes
with age. Excellent descriptions of the anatomy of the retina indicate why
some structures are raised, depressed, or change with heart beat [1–5]. Thus,

FIGURE 9.1 A schematic diagram of the human eye.

 

the shape of the retina, and its visualization at a distance of about 2 cm (in
an adult) through a pupil that is rarely greater than 8 mm, have implications
for imaging according to the principles of geometrical optics. Specific length
or width measurements given here should be considered to be subject to
measurement error, whether due to histological artifacts of the delicate tissues
or simplifying assumptions with optical means.

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