OCT angiography compared to fluorescein angiography, indocyanine green angiography and optical coherence tomography in the detection of choroidal neovascularization in pigment epithelial detachment
Acta Ophthalmologica Apr 26, 2019
de Oliveira T, et al. - Researchers performed multimodal imaging—MI (fluorescein angiography, indocyanine green angiography, optical coherence tomography) and optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) with manual and automatic segmentation on 22 eyes of 15 patients in order to assess the agreement between MI and OCTA in the detection of choroidal neovascularization (CNV) in patients with pigment epithelial detachment with subretinal/intraretinal fluid (PED+F) vs patients with PED without subretinal/intraretinal fluid (PED-F). Findings revealed solid agreement between the multimodal imaging with respect to the ability of OCTA to detect possible initial CNV in a patient with PED-F. The observed accuracy was 95.45%. To identify CNV on OCTA, the manual and automatic segmentation also demonstrated agreement.
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