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Limited lateral spread of stromal edema in the human cornea fitted with a ('donut') contact lens with a large central aperture

 

作者: HoldenBrien A.,   McnallyJohn J.,   EganPatrick,  

 

期刊: Current Eye Research  (Taylor Available online 1988)
卷期: Volume 7, issue 6  

页码: 601-605

 

ISSN:0271-3683

 

年代: 1988

 

DOI:10.3109/02713688809031816

 

出版商: Taylor&Francis

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

Topographical corneal thickness changes were monitored in 10 subjects who each wore a hydrogel contact lens with a large central aperture (“donut”lens) for 6 hours. Analysis of local corneal thickness changes indicates that no corneal swelling occurred in the central exposed area of the cornea, but significant swelling occurred in the area of the cornea covered by the lens. The lateral cut-off point of corneal swelling was well-defined, indicating that the contact lens-induced corneal edema did not spread laterally to the exposed area of the cornea over the six-hour wearing period. Swelling of the peripheral cornea covered by the lens was found to be significantly greater with a tightly-fitting, immobile donut lens than with a loosely-fitting lens, suggesting that tear mixing may explain in part the apparent averaging of edema during open-eye wear of hydrogel lenses of varying thickness profile. The possibility that lateral spread of lactate within the stroma may contribute to this apparent averaging of edema was not confirmed in this study. We suggest that rapid metabolism or elimination of lactate in the exposed region of the cornea, or evaporation through the central lens aperture, may have contributed to the maintenance of normal central corneal thickness during open-eye wear of the donut lens.

 

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