In vivo functional imaging of human photoreceptors is an emerging field, with compelling potential applications in basic science, translational research, and clinical management of ophthalmic disease. Measurement of light-evoked changes in the cone photoreceptors has been successfully demonstrated using adaptive optics (AO) coherent flood illumination (CFI), AO scanning light ophthalmoscopy (SLO), AO optical coherence tomography (OCT), and full-field OCT with digital aberration correction (DAC). While the optical and computational principles of these systems differ greatly, and while these differences manifest in the resulting measurements, we believe that the approaches are all sensitive to light-evoked swelling of the cells. We describe a combined OCT-SLO with AO designed to measure this light-evoked swelling. In addition to OCT measurement of cone responses, we report their simultaneous OCT-SLO measurement as well as OCT measurement of rod photoreceptor function, neither of which, to our knowledge, have been reported before.
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