The ability to measure retinal blood flow (RBF) accurately and reproducibly is crucial for diagnosing and monitoring ocular diseases such as glaucoma and hypertensive retinopathy. Impaired autoregulation of blood flow plays a key role in both the development and progression of glaucoma. Multimodal adaptive optics (mAO) using scanning laser ophthalmoscopy and optical coherence tomography offer superior spatial and temporal resolution and the ability to measure blood flow in retinal microvasculature. Here we evaluate RBF measurement reproducibility and repeatability using a mAO technique.
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