Light & Optics Basics - Ray's Eye View
- Light: Electromagnetic radiation; wave-particle duality. Visible spectrum: 400-700 nm.
- Reflection: Light bounces; angle of incidence = angle of reflection.
- Refraction: Light bends passing between media. Snell's Law: $n_1 \sin(\theta_1) = n_2 \sin(\theta_2)$.
- Refractive index ($n$): $n = c/v$. Higher $n$ means slower light, more bending.
- Lenses:
- Convex (converging, +): Corrects hyperopia.
- Concave (diverging, -): Corrects myopia.
- Focal point: Where parallel rays converge/appear to diverge.
- Focal length ($f$): Lens to focal point distance.
- Diopter ($D$): Lens power; $D = 1/f$ ($f$ in meters).
- Vergence: Degree of light convergence/divergence (diopters).

⭐ The cornea is the eye's primary refractive surface, contributing ~+43D to the total ~+60D optical power.
Anterior Segment Imaging - Cornea's Close-Up
- Foundation: Slit-lamp biomicroscopy for initial detailed examination.
- Corneal Topography: Maps corneal surface power.
- Placido disk: Anterior curvature via reflected mires.
- Scheimpflug (e.g., Pentacam): Rotating camera; anterior/posterior curvature, pachymetry, anterior chamber depth (ACD).
- AS-OCT (Anterior Segment Optical Coherence Tomography): High-resolution optical cross-sections.
- Measures: Central Corneal Thickness (CCT ~540 µm), epithelial maps, anterior chamber angle.
- Uses: Glaucoma, refractive surgery planning.
- Specular Microscopy: Evaluates endothelial cell density (Normal: 2000-3000 cells/mm²) & morphology.
- Confocal Microscopy: In-vivo cellular detail (e.g., fungal/Acanthamoeba keratitis).
- UBM (Ultrasound Biomicroscopy): High frequency (35-50 MHz) ultrasound; images structures behind iris (ciliary body, sulcus).

⭐ Scheimpflug imaging uniquely provides both anterior and posterior corneal elevation and curvature data, vital for early keratoconus detection and refractive surgery screening.
Posterior Segment & Angio - Retina In Motion
- Dynamic Imaging: Visualizes blood flow & structural changes over time in the posterior segment.
- Fundus Fluorescein Angiography (FFA):
- Dye: Sodium Fluorescein (IV).
- Excitation: 465-490 nm (blue light), Emission: 520-530 nm (yellow-green light).
- Phases: Choroidal (pre-arterial), Arterial, Arteriovenous, Venous (early, mid, late), Late staining/leakage.
- Key findings: Hyperfluorescence (leakage, pooling, staining, window defect), Hypofluorescence (blockage, vascular filling defect).
- Indocyanine Green Angiography (ICGA):
- Dye: Indocyanine Green (IV).
- Near-infrared light: Deeper penetration, better visualization of choroidal circulation.
- Uses: Occult Choroidal Neovascularization (CNV), Polypoidal Choroidal Vasculopathy (PCV), choroidal tumors.
- Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography (OCT-A):
- Non-invasive, no dye required.
- Detects motion of Red Blood Cells (RBCs) to create angiograms.
- Provides depth-resolved 3D vascular maps (retinal & choroidal plexuses).
- Applications: Diabetic Retinopathy (DR), Age-related Macular Degeneration (AMD), Retinal Vein Occlusion (RVO).

⭐ In FFA, a "hot disc" (diffuse optic disc hyperfluorescence) can indicate optic disc edema or papillitis, representing leakage from disc capillaries.
Cross-Sectional Imaging - Depth & Detail
- Ultrasound (USG): Uses sound waves.
- A-Scan: Measures axial length (IOL power). Time vs. echo amplitude.
- B-Scan: 2D cross-section. Posterior segment if opaque media.
- UBM (Ultrasound Biomicroscopy): High frequency (35-50 MHz). Anterior segment (angle, ciliary body). Limited penetration.
- Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT): Light-based, high resolution (1-15 µm), near-histological.
- Principle: Low-coherence interferometry. Measures optical backscattering.
- Types: TD-OCT, SD-OCT (faster, ↑res), SS-OCT (fastest, ↑depth).
- Applications: Macula (edema, AMD), glaucoma (RNFL), cornea.
⭐ SD-OCT & SS-OCT offer faster acquisition & higher axial resolution than TD-OCT.
- OCT Angiography (OCTA): Non-invasive, dye-less vascular imaging.
- Detects RBC motion.
- Applications: DR, RVO, AMD, neovascularization.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- A-scan USG measures axial length (IOL power); B-scan images posterior segment pathology.
- OCT uses low-coherence interferometry for high-res retinal/ONH imaging & RNFL analysis.
- FFA (fluorescein) shows retinal/choroidal circulation, leakage, and neovascularization.
- ICGA (indocyanine green) is superior for imaging choroidal vasculature and pathology.
- Corneal topography maps anterior curvature; tomography (Scheimpflug) provides 3D corneal analysis.
- Specular microscopy assesses corneal endothelial cell density and morphology.
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