During the European Society of Retina Specialists (EURETINA) meeting in Paris, France, Andreas Pollreisz, MD, presented on new imaging technologies and multimodal imaging techniques.
In this video, learn more about the research and about Pollreisz, who is an assistant professor of ophthalmology at Medical University of Vienna in Austria. He was an invited speaker during the EURETINA session on diabetic retinopathy and diabetic macular oedema (DMO), focusing on optical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-A). His presentation was titled “OCT-A widefield imaging: must have or nice to have?”
Watch the full video to hear how Prof Pollreisz answered that question.
And, don’t miss these other highlights:
- Clinical tips for imaging the retinal periphery in patients with diabetes
- Which imaging modalities will still be used in 10 years
- The current limitations of OCT-A, and the ways in which it is underutilised
- How artificial intelligence could alter the clinical approach to ischemia, DMO, neovascularisation and other retinal pathologies