The choroid is a vascular plexus located between the retina and the sclera, providing oxygen and nourishment to the outer layers of the retina. Thickness changes in the choroid are of importance in the pathophysiology of various ocular diseases such as glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), and others. Our previous choroidal layer segmentation method of 3D macular optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans using choroidal vessel segmentation tended to segment thinner choroidal layers than ground truths, requiring long running time and much memory. To overcome these drawbacks, we introduce a new, fast, and memory-efficient multiresolution LOGISMOS (layered optimal graph image segmentation for multiple objects and surfaces) method. The key idea of the method is to consequently segment the choroidal layer in the higher resolution sub-OCT image volume constrained by the layer segmented in the lower resolution OCT image volume to reduce the size of columns for graph search. Generally, it outperformed our previous method and showed a similar performance to the inter-observer variability between 2 experts.
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