-
-
Categories
-
-
Comparison of Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Thickness Measured by Cirrus HD and Stratus Optical Coherence Tomography
OphSource (May 7 2009) Journal Articles , Glaucoma
-
Ophthalmology: RNFL thickness as determined by the two OCT machines were different but well correlated. Overall sensitivity and specificity were higher with Cirrus OCT.
(Read Full Article)
Login to comment
Related Articles
- Comparison of Scanning Laser Polarimetry and Optical Coherence Tomography in Quantitative Retinal Nerve Fiber Assessment
- also categorized in Journal Articles
- Characteristics and reproducibility of anterior chamber angle assessment by anterior-segment optical coherence tomography
- also written by Kook, Michael S.
- Effects of Age on OCT Measurements of Healthy Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer, Macula, and Optic Nerve Head
- also written by Sung, Kyung Rim
- Reproducibility of RTVue Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Thickness and Optic Disc Measurements and Agreement with Stratus Optical Coherence Tomography Measurements
- also categorized in Journal Articles
- Comparison of time domain Stratus OCT and spectral domain SLO/OCT for assessment of macular thickness and volume
- also categorized in Journal Articles
- Three-dimensional imaging of an optic disk pit using high resolution optical coherence tomography
- also categorized in Journal Articles
- Effects of scan circle displacement in optical coherence tomography retinal nerve fibre layer thickness measurement: a RNFL modelling study
- also categorized in Journal Articles
- Correlation between Optical Coherence Tomography and glaucomatous optic nerve head damage in children
- also categorized in Journal Articles
- Comparison of Optic Disc Margin Identified by Color Disc Photography and High-Speed Ultrahigh-Resolution Optical Coherence Tomography
- also written by Sung, Kyung Rim
- Prospective Comparison of Cirrus and Stratus Optical Coherence Tomography for Quantifying Retinal Thickness
- also categorized in Journal Articles
-



Recent Comments
Eye on OCT » Contact Us
Zeiss is investigating a range of technologies for the future.
Romar » Contact Us
I would like to know what you think about Swept-Source OCT in glaucoma and if ...
See all recent comments