Indocyanine Green (ICG) Angiography uses a special dye to allow practitioners to get an image of a part of the eye that is normally hard to see with other methods -- the choroid. Located in the back of the eye, normally the choroid and its network of blood vessels are hidden by pigmentation. During the procedure, a patient is injected with indocyanine dye that has glowing, "fluorescent" qualities that can help an ophthalmologist see past that pigmentation to the choroid and ultimately produce an image using a digital imaging system.
Select up to 5 products from below to compare or request more information.
Heidelberg Engineering, Inc.
- Weight (lbs): Inquire
- Power Supply: Inquire
- Filters: Inquire
- Working Distance: Inquire
- Photographic Angles: 30° x 30°; optional 55° lens
- Image Magnification/Resolution: 10 µm/pixel
- Digital Imaging (Y/N): Yes
- Light Source: 820 nm laser; 870 nm SLD
- Imaging Modes: Inquire
- Scan Depth: 1.9 mm
- A-Scan Speed: Inquire
- Axial Resolution: 3.9 µm (digital)
- Transverse Resolution: 14 µm
- Field Angle: Inquire
- Viewing Magnification: Inquire
- Diopter Compensation: Inquire
Read More
Inquire
Select up to 5 products from above to compare or request more information.
Tags:
Please Login or Register to Create Tags