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Longitudinal Comparison of Constant Artifacts in Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography in Patients with Posterior Uveitis Compared to Healthy Subjects

Background: Knowledge about artifacts in optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) is important to avoid misinterpretations. An overview of possible artifacts in posterior uveitis provides important information for interpretations. Methods: In this monocentric prospective study, OCTA images fr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of clinical medicine 2022-09, Vol.11 (18), p.5376
Main Authors: Pohlmann, Dominika, Berlin, Martin, Reidl, Felix, Künzel, Steffen Emil, Pleyer, Uwe, Joussen, Antonia M, Winterhalter, Sibylle
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Background: Knowledge about artifacts in optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) is important to avoid misinterpretations. An overview of possible artifacts in posterior uveitis provides important information for interpretations. Methods: In this monocentric prospective study, OCTA images from a total of 102 eyes of 54 patients with posterior uveitis, and an age-matched control group including 34 healthy subjects (67 eyes), were evaluated (day 0, month 3, month 6). We assigned different artifacts to distinct layers. Various types of artifacts were examined in different retinal layers. The χ2 test for the comparison between the control and uveitis group and Cochran’s Q test for the longitudinal comparison within the uveitis group were used. Results: A total of 2238 images were evaluated; 1836 from uveitis patients and 402 from healthy subjects. A total of 2193 artifacts were revealed. Projection (812 [36.3%]), segmentation (579 [25.9%]), shadowing (404 [18.1%]), and blink artifacts (297 [13.3%]) were the most common artifact types. The uveitis group displayed significantly more segmentation artifacts and projection artifacts (p < 0.001). No segmentation artifacts were documented in healthy subjects. The consecutive examinations within the uveitis group revealed the same artifact types without significance (p > 0.1). Conclusions: The uveitis patients showed more segmentation and projection artifacts than the control group. Within the uveitis group, artifacts remained longitudinally constant in terms of artifact type and pattern. The artifacts therefore appear to be reproducible on an individual level.
ISSN:2077-0383
2077-0383
DOI:10.3390/jcm11185376