Engineering Development and Signal Processing Advancements in OCT Angiography: From Custom System Integration to Temporal Domain Denoising
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Date
Authors
Advisor
Haji Reza, Parsin
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Waterloo
Abstract
Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography (OCTA) positions itself as a highly effective,
non-invasive technique that provides depth-resolved visualization of vascular structure
and function. With a continuously emerging need to transition from static angiography
to functional, time-resolved imaging, researchers have identified interconnected challenges.
This thesis fundamentally explores two of these challenges: speckle noise and processing
latency. Typically, spatial filters used to suppress speckle and denoise images are computationally
expensive and act as temporal low-pass filters, destroying the dynamic physiological
signals they intend to isolate. This thesis presents the design, implementation, and in
vivo validation of a streaming-compatible swept-source OCTA (SS-OCTA) architecture relying
on a hardware/software co-design to overcome these limitations. Rather than relying
on isolated downstream algorithms, the system described in this research establishes a validated
quality baseline starting at the hardware level. The custom 1060 nm MEMS-VCSEL
SS-OCT platform developed in this thesis, leverages an adaptive software flyback filter to
assess fast-axis position derivatives, actively isolating and discarding corrupted scans prior
to contrast processing. Building upon this stationary signal foundation, the thesis introduces
Temporal Subband Decomposition and Amplification (TSDA). TSDA operates as a
dual-rate infinite impulse response (IIR) filter along the per-pixel temporal axis, decomposing
the signal into structural, flow, and high frequency speckle bands. This continuous
formulation reduces computational complexity to O(1), bypassing the buffering requirements
of discrete Fourier methods and aiming to isolate physiologically driven flow from
coherent noise. The integrated hardware/software stack was validated against a microfluidic
phantom and an in vivo 14-day-old chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) preparation.
An ablation study reported here confirms the TSDA architecture achieves a processing
latency within the 10 ms budget. Furthermore, the complete pipeline delivered a Peak
Signal-to-Noise Ratio (PSNR) of 27.8 dB against a multi-frame average reference, while
yielding statistically significant improvements in Vessel Contrast-to-Noise Ratio (VCNR).
By replacing spatial averaging with targeted temporal band isolation, the integrated platform
extracts OCTA contrast while preserving the temporal flow signal within the filter
passband.
Description
Keywords
Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA), Swept-source OCT, Temporal subband decomposition, Speckle noise suppression, Hemodynamic preservation, Streaming image processing, GPU-accelerated image processing, Split-spectrum amplitude-decorrelation angiography (SSADA), Chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) model, Biomedical optics, Functional imaging