JV

J.P. Vigueras Guillén

10 records found

The corneal endothelium, a non-regenerative layer of cells controlling the state of corneal hydration, is the most critical tissue of the cornea. Quantifying its health status is not only important to diagnose and treat certain corneal diseases but also relevant to the execution ...
Corneal guttae, which are the abnormal growth of extracellular matrix in the corneal endothelium, are observed in specular images as black droplets that occlude the endothelial cells. To estimate the corneal parameters (endothelial cell density [ECD], coefficient of variation [CV ...
Purpose: To present a fully automatic method to estimate the corneal endothelium parameters from specular microscopy images and to use it to study a one-year follow-up after ultrathin Descemet stripping automated endothelial keratoplasty. Methods: We analyzed 383 post ultrathin D ...
In images of the corneal endothelium (CE) acquired by specular microscopy, endothelial cells are commonly only visible in a part of the image due to varying contrast, mainly caused by challenging imaging conditions as a result of a strongly curved endothelium. In order to estimat ...
Background

Corneal endothelium (CE) images provide valuable clinical information regarding the health state of the cornea. Computation of the clinical morphometric parameters requires the segmentation of endothelial cell images. Current techniques to image the endotheliu ...
The morphometric parameters of the corneal endothelium – cell density (ECD), cell size variation (CV), and hexagonality (HEX) – provide clinically relevant information about the cornea. To estimate these parameters, the endothelium is commonly imaged with a non-contact specular m ...
Corneal endothelium images obtained by in vivo specular microscopy provide important information to assess the health status of the cornea. Estimation of clinical parameters, such as cell density, polymegethism, and pleomorphism, requires accurate cell segmentation. State-of-the- ...
Clinical parameters related to the corneal endothelium can only be estimated by segmenting endothelial cell images. Specular microscopy is the current standard technique to image the endothelium, but its low SNR make the segmentation a complicated task. Recently, we proposed a me ...