As a new and non-invasive imaging technology, optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) has been using in ocular fundus diseases, glaucoma and neuro-ophthalmic disorders for more than 4 years. The most valuable and efficient application of OCTA is in detecting neovascular diseases in the macula. The big advantage of OCTA is for diagnosing all kinds of choroidal neovascularization. OCTA can observe blood flow information in different layers of the retina. To a large extent, it changes our diagnostic thinking and pathway in macular diseases. Before acquiring OCTA image, the operator should be well trained to ensure to get high quality images with good signal strength and less artifact. OCTA report should show the segmentation slab that the ophthalmologist wants to see. So far, OCTA has difficulty to reach peripheral retina with default setting. Even so, OCTA has provided much information of blood flow within retinal vascular arcade for evaluating structural and functional changes. We are expecting that the swept source OCTA could give us better observation of the choroidal blood flow. That should be the breakthrough of the new generation of OCTA.
Citation: Wang Min. Re-understanding optical coherence tomography angiography. Chinese Journal of Ocular Fundus Diseases, 2019, 35(1): 1-2. doi: 10.3760/cma.j.issn.1005-1015.2019.01.001 Copy