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Modeling the Influence of Large Particles on Optical Properties of Nuclear Cataracts: Insights from Enhanced LOCS III-Based Computational Analysis

  • Chi-Hung Lee
  • , Yu-Jung Chen
  • , Yung-Chi Chuang
  • , George Woo
  • , Fen-Chi Lin (Corresponding Author)
  • , Shuan-Yu Huang (Corresponding Author)

Research output: Journal article publicationJournal articleAcademic researchpeer-review

Abstract

Background: Nuclear cataracts cause visual degradation through light scattering by aggregated proteins and particles within the crystalline lens. Existing computational models mainly consider submicron scatterers, while the optical impact of micrometer-scale particles observed in human nuclear cataracts remains underexplored. Objective: This study extends a LOCS III–based computational cataract model by incorporating micrometer-scale particles and quantitatively evaluates their effects on forward and backward light scattering across nuclear cataract grades. Methods: A physics-based scattering model was implemented using optical simulation software (LightTools). Three particle populations—nanometer-scale (S-type), submicron-scale (M-type), and micrometer-scale (L-type)—were uniformly distributed within the lens. Retinal luminance reduction was analyzed for forward scattering, while slit-lamp-based backward scattering simulations were used to evaluate luminance distributions and chromaticity changes. Particle concentrations were varied within clinically reported ranges corresponding to LOCS III grades. Results: Micrometer-scale particles had minimal impact in early nuclear cataract grades but significantly increased forward scattering and luminance loss in advanced grades (NO5–NO6). Backward scattering simulations revealed pronounced luminance enhancement and yellow chromaticity shifts with increasing micrometer-scale particle concentration. One micrometer-scale particle produced a luminance-reduction effect equivalent to approximately 6–7 submicron particles, depending on cataract severity. Conclusions: Including micrometer-scale particles enables a more complete optical representation of nuclear cataracts, linking retinal image degradation with slit-lamp appearance. The model provides a physically grounded framework for offline analysis and reference data generation to support clinical interpretation of cataract grading.
Original languageEnglish
Article number286
Pages (from-to)1-16
Number of pages16
JournalDiagnostics
Volume16
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Jan 2026

Keywords

  • nuclear cataract
  • light scattering
  • micrometer-scale particles
  • LOCS III
  • slit-lamp simulation

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