Claims
- 1. An ophthalmic instrument for capturing an image of the human eye comprising:
an optical subsystem that directs light produced from a first light source into the human eye and that collects and collimates reflections of said light emitted from the human eye, wherein said light comprises phase-aligned wavefronts, and wherein said reflections comprise distorted wavefronts derived from said phase-aligned wavefronts; an adaptive optical subsystem, operably coupled to the optical subsystem, comprising a phase-compensating optical element, controller and a wavefront sensor, wherein the distorted wavefronts derived from said light produced from said first light source are recreated at the phase-compensating optical element and the wavefront sensor, wherein the wavefront sensor measures phase aberrations in said distorted wavefronts and operates in a closed-loop fashion with the controller to control the phase-compensating optical element to compensate for such phase aberrations to restore said distorted wavefronts to phase-aligned wavefronts; and an imaging subsystem, operably coupled to the adaptive optical subsystem, that captures an image of the phase-aligned wavefronts produced by the phase-compensating optical element.
- 2. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said phase-compensating optical element comprises a deformable mirror.
- 3. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 2, wherein said deformable mirror comprises a silicon micro-machined membrane mirror including a silicon chip mounted over a printed circuit board substrate by spacers, wherein a top surface of said silicon chip comprises a membrane which is coated with a reflective layer to form a mirror surface, and wherein the printed circuit board comprises a control electrode structure that operates to deform the shape of the reflective membrane by applying bias and control voltages to the membrane and control electrodes disposed therein.
- 4. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said phase-compensating optical element comprises a liquid crystal device.
- 5. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said wavefront sensor comprises a lenslet array and an imaging device, wherein said lenslet array spatially samples said distorted wavefronts and focuses samples of the distorted wavefront to form a test spot pattern, and wherein said imaging device captures said test spot pattern, and wherein phase aberrations in said distorted wavefronts are measured by characterizing movement of spots in said test spot pattern.
- 6. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 5, wherein said imaging device comprises one of a CCD camera body, CMOS camera body and integrating CCD camera body.
- 7. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 5, wherein said wavefront sensor comprises a relay lens operably coupled between said lenslet array and said imaging device, said relay lens and imaging device mounted on a moveable stage that translates linearly along the optical axis of the relay lens and imaging device.
- 8. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 7, wherein said lenslet array comprises an array of lenslets each comprising a reference fiducial point that contributes to a reference spot pattern imaged by the relay lens onto the imaging device in a calibration mode.
- 9. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 8, wherein a reference null position for calculating movement of a spot in said test spot pattern produced from a given lenslet is derived from location of a spot in said reference spot pattern produced from the given lenslet.
- 10. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 9, wherein said calibration mode dynamically assigns non-overlapping subaperatures of the imaging device to lenslets of the lenslet array for use in tracking movement of spots of the test spot pattern.
- 11. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 9, wherein said calibration mode dynamically assigns non-overlapping subaperatures of the imaging device to particular lenslets of the lenslet array for use in tracking movement of spots of the test spot pattern, wherein each particular lenslet corresponds to a single spot in both said reference spot pattern and said test spot pattern.
- 12. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said imaging subsystem includes an imaging device for capturing an image of the phase-aligned wavefronts produced by the phase-compensating optical element.
- 13. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 12, wherein said imaging device comprises one of a CCD camera body, CMOS camera body, and integrating CCD camera body.
- 14. The ophthalmic instrument camera of claim 12, wherein said imaging device is coupled to an image display apparatus via communication link.
- 15. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 14, wherein said communication link comprises a USB interface.
- 16. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said imaging subsystem includes a photographic film unit for capturing an image of the phase-aligned wavefronts produced by the phase-compensating optical element.
- 17. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said first light source comprises a flash source.
- 18. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 17, wherein said flash source comprises one of a xenon flash lamp and krypton flash lamp.
- 19. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said optical subsystem further comprises a second light source, distinct from said first light source, that produces light in an observation mode, wherein said optical subsystem directs light produced from the second light source to the human eye and collects reflections of such light for observation of the human eye.
- 20. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 19, wherein said second light source comprises one of a halogen lamp and at least one infra-red light emitting diode.
- 21. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 19, wherein said optical subsystem directs reflections derived from the second light source to a view finder for observation of the human eye.
- 22. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 19, wherein said optical subsystem directs reflections derived from the second light source to an imaging device which captures an image for display on an image display for observation of the human eye.
- 23. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 22, wherein said imaging device comprises one of a CCD camera body and a CMOS camera body.
- 24. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 22, wherein said image display comprises a TFT LCD device.
- 25. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 5, further comprising a computing apparatus, operably coupled to the imaging device of said wavefront sensor, executing a graphical user interface program for performing alignment operations of said wavefront sensor.
- 26. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 25, wherein said alignment operations comprise at least one of the following:
i) verifying that a real-time display of the image captured by said imaging device has satisfactory characteristics; ii) adjusting the exposure time of the imaging device; iii) verifying that an alignment beam is positioned so that it is centered on the lenslet array and imaging device; iv) verifying that the alignment beam is focused on the lenslet array; and v) verifying alignment of the optical axis of the wavefront sensor.
- 27. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said optical subsystem, adaptive optical subsystem and imaging subsystem are packaged in separate and distinct modular housings that interface via detachable connectors.
- 28. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 27, wherein both the adaptive optical subsystem and the imaging subsystem can be selectively interfaced directly to the optical subsystem.
- 29. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 27, wherein both the adaptive optical subsystem and the imaging subsystem can be selectively interfaced directly to a relay lens adapter that is detachably interfaced to the optical subsystem.
- 30. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, further comprising an internal fixation target that is used to adjust accommodation of the lens of the subject eye such that it is focused at (or substantially near) infinity.
- 31. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, configured as a desktop instrument.
- 32. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, configured as a hand-held instrument.
- 33. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 32, further comprising a strap affixed to the housing of the ophthalmic instrument that enables a user to hold the ophthalmic instrument by sliding the user's hand under the strap.
- 34. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, configured as a hand-held binocular instrument having two channels, each having a separate optical subsystem and adaptive optical subsystem.
- 35. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said optical subsystem, adaptive optical subsystem and imaging subsystem capture a high resolution image of a portion of the ocular fundus of the human eye.
- 36. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said optical subsystem, adaptive optical subsystem and imaging subsystem capture a high resolution image of a portion of the cornea of the human eye.
- 37. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein said optical subsystem, adaptive optical subsystem and imaging subsystem capture a high resolution image of a portion of the human eye.
- 38. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, in combination with a lens fabrication system, wherein the adaptive optical subsystem provides data characterizing high order optical aberrations of the eye to the lens fabrication system.
- 39. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, in combination with a computer-assisted ophthalmic surgery system, wherein the adaptive optical subsystem provides data characterizing high order optical aberrations of the eye to the computer-assisted ophthalmic surgery system.
- 40. The ophthalmic instrument of claim 1, wherein the adaptive optical subsystem provides data characterizing high order optical aberrations of the eye to a practitioner for ophthalmic treatment of the eye.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] The present application is related to U.S. application Ser. No. 09/874,401, entitled “Modular Adaptive Optical Subsystem for Integration with a Fundus Camera Body and CCD Camera Unit and Improved Fundus Camera Employing Same,” by Bruce M. Levine, and U.S. application Ser. No. 09/874,404, entitled “Ophthalmic Instrument Having An Integral Wavefront Sensor and Display Device That Displays A Graphical Representation of High Order Aberrations of the Human Eye Measured by the Wavefront Sensor,” by Bruce M. Levine, and U.S. application Ser. No. 09/874,903, entitled “Method Of Treating Human Eye With A Wavefront Sensor-Based Ophthalmic Instrument,” by Bruce M. Levine, each Application filed Jun. 5, 2001 and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.