43 research outputs found

    The ‘barcode sign’ seen on optical coherence tomography of extensive corneal vascularization

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    Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) is used extensively in imaging the cornea in health and disease. OCT delineates interfaces of differing refractive indices, which often but not always correspond to histological features of the tissue. Interpretation of images in the context of histology can be difficult. Some tissues or substances, like cyanoacrylate glue on the cornea, obstruct the passage of light and cast shadows (AlMaazmi et al., 2019) obscuring all features deeper to the obstruction.We report a clinical sign, seen on corneal OCT images, which is consistently present in relation to corneal vascularization. 5 patients with extensive corneal vascularization secondary to infectious keratitis (2), limbal stem cell deficiency (LSCD) (2) and interstitial keratitis (1) were examined clinically by slit lamp examination and by OCT as part of their routine assessment. The infectious keratitis cases and the interstitial keratitis case were in the healing stage after intensive antibiotic and topical steroid treatment respectively. The LSCD case was two years post chemical injury

    Antimicrobial peptides in human corneal tissue of patients with fungal keratitis

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    Background Fungal keratitis (FK) is the leading cause of unilateral blindness in the developing world. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have been shown to play an important role on human ocular surface (OS) during bacterial, viral and protozoan infections. In this study, our aim was to profile a spectrum of AMPs in corneal tissue from patients with FK during the active pase of infection and after healing.Methods OS samples were collected from patients at presentation by impression cytology and scraping. Corneal button specimens were collected from patients undergoing therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty for management of severe FK or healed keratitis. Gene expression of human beta-defensin (HBD)-1, -2, -3 and -9, S100A7, and LL-37 was determined by quantitative real-time PCR.Results Messenger RNA expression (mRNA) for all AMPs was shown to be significantly upregulated in FK samples. The levels of HBD-1 and -2 mRNA were found to be elevated in 18/20 FK samples. Whereas mRNA for HBD-3 and S100A7 was upregulated in 11/20 and HBD9 was increased in 15/20 FK samples. LL-37 mRNA showed moderate upregulation in 7/20 FK samples compared with controls. In healed scar samples, mRNA of all AMPs was found to be low and matching the levels in controls.Conclusion AMP expression is a consistent feature of FK, but not all AMPs are equally expressed. HBD-1 and -2 are most consistently expressed and LL-37 the least, suggesting some specificity of AMP expression related to FK. These results will help to identify HBD sequence templates for designing FK-specific peptides to test for therapeutic potential

    Real-world experience of using ciclosporin-A 0.1% (Ikervis) in the management of ocular surface inflammatory diseases

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    Purpose: To report the real-world experience of using topical ciclosporin, Ikervis, in the management of ocular surface inflammatory diseases (OSIDs).Methods: This was a retrospective study of patients treated with Ikervis for OSIDs at the Queen’s Medical Centre, Nottingham, between 2016 and 2019. Relevant data, including demographics, indications, clinical parameters, outcomes and adverse events, were collected and analysed for patients who had completed at least 6 months follow-up. For analytic purpose, clinical outcome was categorised as ‘successful’ (resolved or stable disease), ‘active disease’ and ‘drug intolerance’.Results: 463 patients were included; mean age was 51.1±21.6 years, with a 59.0% female predominance. Mean follow-up was 14.6±9.2 months. The most common diagnosis was dry eye disease (DED; 322, 69.5%), followed by allergic eye disease (AED; 53, 11.4%) and ocular mucous membrane pemphigoid/Steven-Johnson syndrome (OMMP/SJS; 38, 8.2%). Successful treatment was achieved in 343 (74.1%) patients, with 44 (9.5%) requiring additional treatment and 76 (16.4%) reporting drug intolerance. The efficacy of Ikervis was highest in DED (264, 82.0%), followed by OMMP/SJS (25, 65.8%) and post-keratoplasty (7, 50.0%;

    In vivo confocal microscopy features and clinicohistological correlation of limbal nerve corpuscles

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    Aims To describe the in vivo confocal microscopy (IVCM) features of human limbal nerve corpuscles (LNCs) and correlate these with the histological features.Methods We examined 40 eyes of 29 healthy living subjects (17 female, 12 male; mean age=47.6) by IVCM. Four limbal quadrants were scanned through all epithelial layers and stroma to identify the LNCs and associated nerves. Ten fresh normal human corneoscleral discs from five deceased patients with a mean age of 67 years and 17 eye-bank corneoscleral rims with a mean age of 57.6 years were stained as whole mounts by the acetylcholinesterase (AChE) method to demonstrate LNCs and corneal nerves. Stained tissue was scanned in multiple layers with the NanoZoomer digital pathology microscope. The in vivo results were correlated to the histological findings.Results On IVCM, LNCs were identified in 65% of the eyes studied and were mainly (84%) located in the inferior or superior limbal regions. They appeared either as bright (hyper-reflective) round or oval single structures within the hyporeflective, relatively acellular fibrous core of the palisades or were clustered in groups, often located anterior to the palisades of Vogt. They measured 36 µm in largest diameter (range 20–56 µm). The in vivo features were consistent with the histology, which showed LNCs as strongly AChE positive round or oval structures.Conclusion The strong correlation with histology will enable use of IVCM to study LNCs in normal and disease conditions

    Validation of Endogenous Control Genes for Gene Expression Studies on Human Ocular Surface Epithelium

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    PURPOSE: To evaluate a panel of ten known endogenous control genes (ECG) with quantitative reverse transcription PCR (qPCR), for identification of stably expressed endogenous control genes in the ocular surface (OS) epithelial regions including cornea, limbus, limbal epithelial crypt and conjunctiva to normalise the quantitative reverse transcription PCR data of genes of interest expressed in above-mentioned regions. METHOD: The lasermicrodissected (LMD) OS epithelial regions of cryosectioned corneoscleral buttons from the cadaver eyes were processed for RNA extraction and cDNA synthesis to detect genes of interest with qPCR. Gene expression of 10 known ECG--glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), beta actin (ACTB), peptidylprolyl isomerase (PPIA), TATA-box binding protein (TBP1), hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT1), beta glucuronidase (GUSB), Eucaryotic 18S ribosomal RNA (18S), phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK1), beta-2-microglobulin (B2M), ribosomal protein, large, P0 (RPLP0)--was measured in the OS epithelial regions by qPCR method and the data collected was further analysed using geNorm software. RESULTS: The expression stability of ecgs in the os epithelial regions in increasing order as determined with genorm software is as follows: ACTB<18S<TBP<B2M<PGK1<HPRT1<GUSB<GAPDH<PPIA-RPLP0. In this study, geNorm analysis has shown the following ECGs pairs to be most stably expressed in individual OS epithelial regions: HPRT1-TBP in cornea, GUSB-PPIA in limbus, B2M-PPIA and RPLP0-TBP in LEC and conjunctiva respectively. However, across the entire ocular surface including all the regions mentioned above, PPIA-RPLP0 pair was shown to be most stable. CONCLUSION: This study has identified stably expressed ECGs on the OS epithelial regions for effective qPCR results in genes of interest. The results from this study are broadly applicable to quantitative reverse transcription PCR studies on human OS epithelium and provide evidence for the use of PPIA-RPLP0 ECGs pair in quantitative reverse transcription PCR across the OS epithelium

    The power of observation

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    Lamellar keratoplasty techniques

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    © 2018 Indian Journal of Ophthalmology. Lamellar keratoplasty (LK) has revolutionized corneal graft surgery in several ways. Deep anterior LK (DALK) has eliminated risk of failure due to endothelial rejection. Endothelial keratoplasty (EK) has almost eliminated induced astigmatism and the 'weak' graft-host junction as seen with penetrating keratoplasty (PK) and also reduced the risk of endothelial rejection. LK provided new insights into posterior corneal anatomy that led to better understanding and performance of DALK and to the development of another EK procedure, namely pre-Descemet's EK (PDEK). Surgical procedures for LK were further refined based on the improved understanding and are able to deliver better surgical outcomes in terms of structural integrity and long-term patient satisfaction, reducing the need of further surgeries and minimizing patient Discomfort. In most specialist centers, anterior lamellar techniques like DALK and EK techniques like Descemet's stripping EK (DSEK) and Descemet's membrane EK (DMEK) have replaced the full-thickness PK where possible. The introduction of microkeratome, femtosecond laser, and PDEK clamp have made LK techniques easier and more predictable and have led to the innovation of another LK procedure, namely Bowman membrane transplant (BMT). In this article, we Discuss the evolution of Different surgical techniques, their principles, main outcomes, and limitations. To date, experience with BMT is limited, but DALK has become the gold standard for anterior LK. The EK procedures too have undergone a rapid transition from DSEK to DMEK and PDEK emerging as a viable option. Ultrathin-DSEK may still have a role in modern EK
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