Literature DB >> 12696629

Impression cytology on conjunctiva and cornea in dry eye patients establishes a correlation between squamous metaplasia and dry eye clinical severity.

J Murube1, L Rivas.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To obtain deeper knowledge of the cellular transition in squamous metaplasia, and to look for a correlation between the clinical grade of severity of dry eye and the grade of squamous metaplasia of the corneal and conjunctival epithelium, studied by impression cytology.
METHODS: A total of 143 patients with dry eye disorders of different grades of clinical severity and 33 control subjects of matched age and sex were studied. Symptoms, clinical tests (including Schirmer test, slit-lamp examination, break-up time, rose Bengal staining, vanishing lacunar sulci, and neovascularization), and tear osmolarity were used to establish the diagnosis of dry eye. The subjects were classified into six clinical grades, grade 0 indicating normal and grades 1 to 5 progressively more severe dry eye. Impression cytology specimens were taken from the central cornea and different areas of the conjunctiva of one eye from all patients. A morphologic and morphometric study of the photographs obtained by light microscopy showed cell size, nuclear size, nuclear-cytoplasmic ratio (N:C) in nonsecretory epithelial cells, and density of goblet cells.
RESULTS: Morphometric and morphologic studies of the ocular surface cells indicated significant differences, mainly in cell sizes, nuclear alterations, and the N:C ratio, in nonsecretory epithelial cells of the conjunctiva and cornea, and in goblet cell densities from the conjunctiva, between the clinically normal eyes and those with the five grades of clinical severity of dry eye, with different degrees of squamous metaplasia.
CONCLUSIONS: A morphologic and morphometric analysis of the ocular surface from patients with dry eye obtained by impression cytology led us to draft a new grading system containing one normal level and five levels of squamous metaplasia. This new grading system is based on a significant decrease in the number of goblet cells with less periodic acid-Schiff-hematoxylin-positive staining, an increase in nonsecretory cell size, more marked cell separation, a lower N:C ratio, and an increase in nuclear alterations. The clinical severity of the dry eye correlates with these alterations.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12696629     DOI: 10.1177/112067210301300201

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Ophthalmol        ISSN: 1120-6721            Impact factor:   2.597


  22 in total

1.  The correlation of routine tear function tests and conjunctival impression cytology in dry eye syndrome.

Authors:  Prachi Kumar; Rahul Bhargava; Manoj Kumar; Somesh Ranjan; Manjushri Kumar; Pratima Verma
Journal:  Korean J Ophthalmol       Date:  2014-03-14

2.  Down-regulation of Pax6 is associated with abnormal differentiation of corneal epithelial cells in severe ocular surface diseases.

Authors:  W Li; Y-T Chen; Y Hayashida; G Blanco; A Kheirkah; H He; S-Y Chen; C-Y Liu; S C G Tseng
Journal:  J Pathol       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 7.996

Review 3.  Update on the role of impression cytology in ocular surface disease.

Authors:  Zhang-Zhe Thia; Louis Tong
Journal:  Taiwan J Ophthalmol       Date:  2019-09-12

4.  Topical interferon-gamma neutralization prevents conjunctival goblet cell loss in experimental murine dry eye.

Authors:  Xiaobo Zhang; Cintia S De Paiva; Zhitao Su; Eugene A Volpe; De-Quan Li; Stephen C Pflugfelder
Journal:  Exp Eye Res       Date:  2013-12-04       Impact factor: 3.467

5.  Air exposure induced squamous metaplasia of human limbal epithelium.

Authors:  Wei Li; Yasutaka Hayashida; Ying-Ting Chen; Hua He; David Y Tseng; Morgan Alonso; Szu-Yu Chen; Xinghua Xi; Scheffer C G Tseng
Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 4.799

Review 6.  The Pathophysiology of Dry Eye Disease: What We Know and Future Directions for Research.

Authors:  Stephen C Pflugfelder; Cintia S de Paiva
Journal:  Ophthalmology       Date:  2017-11       Impact factor: 12.079

7.  Autologous serum eye drops improve tear production, both lachrymal flow and stability tests and conjunctival impression cytology with transfer in dry eye disease.

Authors:  Sandra L Valencia Castillo; Esther Sáez Martín; Luis J García Frade; F Javier García-Miguel
Journal:  Blood Transfus       Date:  2020-06-10       Impact factor: 3.443

Review 8.  The ocular surface immune system through the eyes of aging.

Authors:  Jeremias G Galletti; Cintia S de Paiva
Journal:  Ocul Surf       Date:  2021-02-20       Impact factor: 5.033

9.  A cerium oxide loaded glycol chitosan nano-system for the treatment of dry eye disease.

Authors:  Fan Yu; Min Zheng; Alice Yang Zhang; Zongchao Han
Journal:  J Control Release       Date:  2019-10-24       Impact factor: 9.776

10.  Ocular surface disorder among adult patients with type II diabetes mellitus and its correlation with tear film markers: A pilot study.

Authors:  Vijayakumari Manchikanti; Nirupama Kasturi; Medha Rajappa; Debasis Gochhait
Journal:  Taiwan J Ophthalmol       Date:  2020-10-08
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