Description
The overall goal of this study is to develop OCT Vibrography (aka OCT elastography) as a novel tool for measuring biomechanical properties of human tissues in vivo. The investigators aim to establish baseline data in healthy subjects, compare elastic moduli in different tissue types, and measure differences in elastic moduli between keratoconus and normal eyes. If successful, this project will provide useful, previously inaccessible elastic parameters and advance the investigators’ understanding of the relationship between the bulk mechanical properties and the microstructure of the human tissue in vivo. This information can ultimately be used to improve the diagnosis and treatment of keratoconus, inflammatory skin diseases, and inflammatory gingiva diseases. More broadly, the technologies developed in this project will have relevance to other potential applications beyond the tissues in this research study.