Penetration-enhanced optical coherence tomography angiography with optical clearing agent for clinical evaluation of human skin

Yidi Liu, Dan Zhu, Jingjiang Xu, Ying Wang, Wei Feng, Defu Chen, Yunqi Li, Haolin Liu, Xianghuan Guo, Haixia Qiu*, Ying Gu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) is an emerging imaging technique which shows its advantages over visualizing microcirculation with free label. However, its shortcomings in imaging depth limit its development in dermatological field. Nowadays, the newly optical clearing agent (OCA) designed for skin optical imaging demonstrates its potential. In our study, whether this OCA can improve the imaging ability of OCTA in healthy human skin and whether the combination of them is beneficial to compare the lesions and the contralateral normal skins in the patients with port wine stains (PWS) have been investigated. Methods: Five healthy volunteers and 3 PWS patients were recruited in this study. In terms of healthy people, the opisthenar area which has same structure information as facial skin was taken for investigating the OCA's ability of enhancing OCTA imaging depth on healthy human skin, besides, in order to verifying whether the exists of skin corneum interfere OCA's function, we compared the effect of only using OCA with that of comprehensive using pre-processing skin and OCA. There are one physical removing corneum method by using medical tape to strip opisthenar skin for over 20-time and one chemical way through applying exfoliating cream. For PWS patient, the combining using OCA and OCTA was applied at the lesion area and the contralateral normal area for the purpose of verifying their ability to provide the information of vessels. Results: This novel OCA had excellent efficacy to increase the penetration depth of human opisthenar skin for the OCTA imaging by approximately 0.16 ± 0.03 mm. Pre-processing of stratum corneum with an exfoliating cream or medical tape stripping did not further benefit the penetrating efficacy of the OCA. Moreover, according to a comprehensive analysis of the OCTA images enhanced by the OCA, the PWS lesions usually have larger density and diameter of the vessels which located in deep layers (beyond 0.21 mm) than the contralateral normal skin. Conclusions: The OCTA imaging depth and contrast were significantly improved by the OCA. The OCA application is a simple and efficient clinical procedure for OCTA enhancement. Moreover, it demonstrated great clinical value to compare the normal skin and the PWS lesions in the patients by the enhanced OCTA imaging.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101734
JournalPhotodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy
Volume30
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Human skin
  • Optical clearing agents (OCA)
  • Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA)
  • Port wine stain (PWS)

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