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Fundus Fluorescein Angiography

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FUNDUS FLUORESCEIN ANGIOGRAPHY Prasanta Kumar Sahoo
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Page 1: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

FUNDUS FLUORESCEIN ANGIOGRAPHY

Prasanta Kumar Sahoo

Page 2: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

WHY FFA?

• To confirms the elements already revealed by clinical examination.

• Flow characteristics in the blood vessels as the dye reaches and circulates through the retina and choroid.

• Gives a clear picture of the retinal vessels and assessment of their functional integrity.

• To monitor the disease intensity and impact of therapy.• Provides guidance for application of focal laser in

photocoagulation therapy.• To detect the leakages without clinical manifestation of

edema

Page 3: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

WHAT ARE THE INFORMATIONS WE GET FROM FFA ?

FFA reveals• Inflammatory status of retinal and choroidal blood

vessels.• Localization of intra retinal lesions e.g. depth of

pathological involvement in DR.• CNV• Neovascularisation in disc or retina• Subretinal fluid status• Cystoid macular edema• Intraretinal/ preretinal haemorrhages• Optic nerve disorders• RPE integrity and disorders• Choroidal neovessels and chorioretinal atrophy

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BASIC PRINCIPLES

• Based on luminescence and fluorescence.

• Luminescence – is the emission of light from any

source other than high temperature.

• Fluorescence is luminescence that is maintained

only by continuous excitation. Excitation occurs

at one wave length and immediate emission

occurs through a longer wave length.

Page 5: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

FLUORESCENCE

• Refers to fluorescein sodium (C20H10Na2O5)

• A brown or orange red crystalline substance, alkaline in nature.

• MW- 376 dalton• Readily diffuses through body fluids

and choriocapillaries but does not diffuse through vascular endothelial cells and RPE (Blood retina barriers)

Page 6: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

OPTICAL PRINCIPLE

• Absorbs blue light (465-490nm ) and Emits yellow-green light (520-530nm)

• Metabolized by liver and exerted by kidney

Page 7: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

FILTERS

1.Blue excitation filter

2.Yellow-green filter

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Blood supply to retina

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GENERAL PRINICIPLES OF FFA

Fluorescein• 85% bound to serum proteins• 15% unbound ‘free’ fluorescein

• Impermeable to fluorescein

Outer blood-retinal barrier (zonula occludens)

• Impermeable to fluorescein

Choriocapillaris• Permeable only to ‘free’ fluorescein

Inner blood-retinal barrier (retinal capillaries)

Page 11: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

Circulation of NaF Dye injected from peripheral vein

Venous circulation

Heart

Arterial system INTERNAL CAROTID ARTERY

Ophthalmic artery Short posterior ciliary artery) Central retinal artery (choroidal circulation.) ( retinal circulation)

N.B. The choroidal filling is 1 second prior to the retinal filling.

Page 12: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

ANGIOGRAPHIC PHASES

• Five angiographic phases:• Pre arterial (Choroidal 9-15 seconds)• Arterial• Arteriovenous(capillary)• Venous• Recirculation

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BASIC ANATOMY

Page 14: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

CONTI…..• The inner retina contains the retinal blood

vessels.• The larger vessels in the Nerve fiber layer.• The retinal capillaries in the Inner nuclear layer.• Both are impermeable to dye.• The outer retina is primarily interstitial space of

the retina, where hemorrhages, edematous fluid and hard exudates accumulate.

• In normal conditions this layer does contain NaF as because of RPE tight junctions(Outer BRB)

• Large choroidal vessels do not leake NaF but choriocapillaris does leak.

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PRE-ARTERIAL/ CHOROIDAL PHASE

• Choroidal flush• Patchy Choroidal filling

because of lobular arrangements of choriocapillaris

• 10-12 sec in young• 12-15 sec in old• Cilioretinal artery fills at

the same time with choroid circulation

• Macula remains dark due to tall RPE and more pigments.

Page 16: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

ARTERIAL PHASE

Page 17: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

Conti …

Page 18: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

ARTERIOVENOUS PHASE

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VENOUS PHASE

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Recirculation phase

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ABNORMAL ANGIOGRAPHIC FINDINGS

Hypofluorescence: Filling defect Blocking defect

Hyperfluorescence : Window defect Leakage Pooling Staining

Page 22: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

Hypofluorescence

• Blocked fluorescence (Transmission defects- blood, pigment, hard exudates etc)

• Vascular filling defects (Circulation abnormality)• Blocked Retinal fluorescence1. Arterial segment material2. Vitreous material3. Inner retinal material• Blocked choroidal fluorescence1. Deep retinal material2. Subretinal material3. Sub RPE material4. Choroidal material

Page 23: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography
Page 24: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

HyperfluorescenceAnomalous vessels

Choroid

Retina

Optic nerve head

Subretinal neovasculari-zationTumor vesselsChorioretinal anastomosis

Vascular tortuositiesDilation and shuntsAnastomosisNeovascularizationAneurysmsTeleangiectasiaTumor vesselsHamatoma

NeovascularizationTortuosityDilationHamatomaTumor vessels

Page 25: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

Hyper-fluorescence

In a preformedspace (pooling)

Into tissue(staining)

Retinal

Subretinal

Retina

Subretinal

Cystoid edema

Detachment ofthe pigmentepithelium

Detachment ofthe sensoryretina

noncystoidedema

e.g.dursen

Page 26: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

Leakage

Page 27: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

Fluorescencewithout theadministration of fluorescein

Autofluorescence

Pseudofluorescence

Drusen of the optic nerve head

Hamatoma

Scleral exudate

Myelinate nerve Fibers, optic nerve drusen

Scar tissue

Foreign body

Page 28: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

Causes of dark appearance of fovea

Avascularity

• Increased density of xanthophyll

• Large RPE cells with more melanin

Blockage of background choroidal fluorescence by:

Page 29: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

Causes of Hyperfluorescence RPE ‘ window’ defect

RPE atrophy (bull’s eye maculopathy

Pooling of dye

Under RPE (pigment epithelial detachment)

Under sensory retina (central serous retinopathy)

Page 30: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

Causes of Hyperfluorescence

Leakage of dye Prolonged dye retention ( staining )

Into sensory retina (cystoid macular oedema)

From new vessels (choroidal neovascularization

Associated with drusen

Page 31: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

Vascular occlusion

Capillary non-perfusion(venous occlusion)

Loss of vascular tissue

Choroideremia or high myopia

Causes of Hypofluorescence

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BRVO- HYPO F- BLOCKED F

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BRVO

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SUB HYLOID. H/ PRERETINAL H HYPO F- BLOCKED

Page 35: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

STARGARDT'S DISEASE

• Fundus flavimaculatus (Stargardt disease (STGD) is the most common childhood recessively inherited macular dystrophy.

• The condition has a genetic basis due to mutations in the ABCA4 gene, and results from the accumulation of visual cycle kinetics-derived byproducts in the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) with secondary photoreceptor dysfunction and death.

• Blocked the choroidal fluorescence, so fundus background looks black.

Page 36: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

AION – HYPO F OF DISC

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Red-free Fundus photos Normal appearance Autofluorescence

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Macular Hole

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ARMD - HYPER- STAINING

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GHPC- HYPER- STAINING

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CHOROIDAL NAEVUS

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DIABETIC MACULOPATHY TREATED WITH LASER

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DIABETIC RETINOPATHY

• Diabetic retinopathy gives a combination of both hyper/ hypofluorescence. Several pathologies are seen in this frame:

• Hypofluorescence: Retinal haemorrhage (1)Ischaemia (2).• Hyperfluorescence:

microaneurysms (3) and neovascularization (4) In addition, there are IRMA (5) between the retinal artery and vein and venous beading (6)

Page 44: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

PDR- HYPER F

Page 45: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

BACKGROUND DIABETIC RETINOPATHY

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CENTRAL SEROUS RETINOPATHY

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CSR – POOLING/ HYPER F

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HYPER F- WINDOW/ POOLING EFFECT

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HYPERTENSIVE RETINOPATHY

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Limitations of FFA

1) Does not permit study of choroidal circulation details due to a) melanin in RPE b) low mol wt of fluorescein

2) More adverse reaction

3) Inability to obtain angiogram in patient with excess hemoglobin or serum protein.

Page 51: Fundus  Fluorescein Angiography

THANK YOU


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