March 2012
Volume 53, Issue 14
Free
ARVO Annual Meeting Abstract  |   March 2012
The Relationship Between Subbasal Nerve Morphology And Corneal Sensation In Ocular Surface Disease
Author Affiliations & Notes
  • Antoine Labbe
    Ophthalmology, Quinze-Vingts National Eye Center, Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines University, Paris, France
    Center for Clinical Investigations 503. Quinze-Vingts National Eye Center, Paris, France
  • Haiyan Alalwani
    Ophthalmology, Quinze-Vingts National Eye Center, Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines University, Paris, France
    Center for Clinical Investigations 503. Quinze-Vingts National Eye Center, Paris, France
  • Charles Van Went
    Ophthalmology, Quinze-Vingts National Eye Center, Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines University, Paris, France
    Center for Clinical Investigations 503. Quinze-Vingts National Eye Center, Paris, France
  • Emmanuelle Brasnu
    Ophthalmology, Quinze-Vingts National Eye Center, Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines University, Paris, France
    Center for Clinical Investigations 503. Quinze-Vingts National Eye Center, Paris, France
  • Christophe Baudouin
    Ophthalmology, Quinze-Vingts National Eye Center, Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines University, Paris, France
    Institut de la Vision/INSERM/UPMC Univ Paris 06/CNRS/CHNO des Quinze-Vingts, Paris, France
  • Footnotes
    Commercial Relationships  Antoine Labbe, None; Haiyan Alalwani, None; Charles Van Went, None; Emmanuelle Brasnu, None; Christophe Baudouin, None
  • Footnotes
    Support  None
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science March 2012, Vol.53, 1811. doi:
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      Antoine Labbe, Haiyan Alalwani, Charles Van Went, Emmanuelle Brasnu, Christophe Baudouin; The Relationship Between Subbasal Nerve Morphology And Corneal Sensation In Ocular Surface Disease. Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 2012;53(14):1811.

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Abstract

Purpose: : To evaluate the relationship between the in vivo confocal microscopic (IVCM) morphology of subbasal corneal nerves and corneal sensitivity in patients with ocular surface disease.

Methods: : Ten healthy volunteers (control group), 12 patients with dry eye (dry eye group) and 14 patients treated with IOP-lowering topical medications (glaucoma group) were included. Central corneal sensation was measured using the contact Cochet-Bonnet esthesiometer. IVCM of the cornea was performed and the following subbasal corneal nerves parameters were analyzed: density, number, width, number of beadings, number of branching, tortuosity and reflectivity. One eye of each subject was included in the study.

Results: : Corneal sensitivity was significantly decreased in dry eye and glaucoma patients compared to controls. The density and number of subbasal corneal nerves were also significantly decreased in dry eye and glaucoma patients compared to controls. There was no difference in terms of subbasal nerve width, number of beadings, tortuosity, reflectivity and number of branching between the dry eye, the glaucoma, and the control groups. In all subjects, corneal sensitivity correlated positively with the density and number of subbasal nerves and the number of beadings. However, in the dry eye group, corneal sensitivity correlated with the density and the number of nerves, while, in the glaucoma group, corneal sensitivity correlated only with the tortuosity of subbasal nerves.

Conclusions: : The relationship between corneal sensation and subbasal nerve morphology, as evaluated with IVCM, depends on the pathophysiological mechanism of ocular surface disease.

Keywords: cornea: clinical science • imaging/image analysis: clinical • imaging methods (CT, FA, ICG, MRI, OCT, RTA, SLO, ultrasound) 
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