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- Title
Adapting a dermatological multi‐laser fluorescent confocal microscope for ophthalmology applications.
- Authors
GRIOT, O; GRIVET, D; ESPINASSE, M; PERROT, JL; LABEILLE, B; CAMBAZARD, F; CAMPOLMI, N; GAIN, P; THURET, G
- Abstract
Purpose To adapt for ophthalmology the only multi‐laser fluorescent confocal microscope available on the market and initially developed for dermatology (Vivascope 1500, MAVIG, GmbH). The arm that maintains the microscope in contact with the skin was too rigid and imprecise, and the disposable plastic window placed at the interface between the tissue and the microscope objective was too large. Both were not convenient for high quality corneal and ocular adnexa imaging Methods We designed specific stands to create a take‐down interface between the confocal microscope, his dermatological arm support and an ophthalmology examination table comprising a 5 degrees of freedom stand (Zeiss, Germany). A male guide rail was machined in polyoxymethylene and permanently fixed on the confocal microscope to avoid repetition of assembly and disassembly. Two females guide rails machined in aluminium 7075 were fixed on the dermatological arm support on the one hand and on an ophthalmological stand on the other hand. Rails were blocked with simple screws. We also designed a new adapter to receive disposable caps already available for corneal confocal microscopy. A lateral camera allowed live visualization of the objective/eye contact Results These new interfaces allowed easy and solid fastening of the confocal microscope on each arms of the two specialties providing optimal conditions for clinical examination. The new ophthalmology arm allowed a precise positioning of the contact objective on the patient eye Conclusion Thanks to theses adaptations, the first multilaser fluorescent confocal microscope is now usable by ophthalmologists, and opens a completely innovative field of exploration
- Subjects
MICROSCOPES; EYE contact; OPHTHALMOLOGY; CONFOCAL microscopy; DEGREES of freedom
- Publication
Acta Ophthalmologica (1755375X), 2012, Vol 90, p0
- ISSN
1755-375X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1755-3768.2012.T095.x