Literature DB >> 17667612

Surface alterations, corneal hypoesthesia, and iris atrophy in patients with climatic droplet keratopathy.

Julio A Urrets-Zavalía1, J Pablo Maccio, Erna G Knoll, Thamara Cafaro, Enrique A Urrets-Zavalia, Horacio M Serra.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To present external eye findings and the observation of iris atrophy in patients with climatic droplet keratopathy (CDK).
METHODS: Twenty-three patients with CDK and 13 controls living in a semideserted plain of the Argentine Patagonia were studied. Besides a comprehensive eye examination, Cochet-Bonnet aesthesiometry, Schirmer II test, breakup time (BUT), and surface staining were performed. According to corneal findings, eyes were grouped as grade 1 (confluent translucent microdroplets localized in the limbic region of the horizontal quadrants); grade 2 (band-shaped subepithelial haziness compromising the central cornea); and grade 3 (previously described lesions with yellow subepithelial droplets). Results were analyzed with the Fisher, Mann-Whitney, and Spearman tests, which were considered significant at P < 0.05.
RESULTS: Nineteen of 23 patients with CDK had bilateral disease, which was asymmetric in 2 of them. Sixteen eyes had grade 1, 21 eyes had grade 2, and 5 eyes had grade 3 disease. Aesthesiometry showed that the more advanced the disease, the more profound the corneal hypoesthesia (P = 0.0008). BUT and ocular surface staining significantly differed between eyes with grade 3 and grade 1, grade 3 and grade 2, and grade 3 and controls. In 38.09% of eyes with CDK and in none of the controls, sectorial depigmentation and atrophy of the inferior iris were observed.
CONCLUSIONS: A severe decrease of corneal sensitivity was observed in advanced stages of CDK. Some degree of dry eye was present in most patients, but severe disease was infrequent at any stage of CDK. Inferior iris depigmentation and atrophy was frequently observed among patients with CDK.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17667612     DOI: 10.1097/ICO.0b013e31806bef31

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cornea        ISSN: 0277-3740            Impact factor:   2.651


  5 in total

1.  In vivo confocal microscopy study of climatic droplet keratopathy.

Authors:  J A Urrets-Zavalia; J O Croxatto; J M Holopainen; T A Cafaro; F Esposito; W Neira; H M Serra
Journal:  Eye (Lond)       Date:  2012-04-27       Impact factor: 3.775

2.  Phospholipidomic Studies in Human Cornea From Climatic Droplet Keratopathy.

Authors:  Maria Fernanda Suarez; Maria Carmen Piqueras; Leandro Correa; Evangelina Esposito; Maria Fernanda Barros; Sanjoy K Bhattacharya; Julio A Urrets-Zavalia; Horacio M Serra
Journal:  J Cell Biochem       Date:  2017-05-23       Impact factor: 4.429

3.  The effect of vitamin C deficiency and chronic ultraviolet-B exposure on corneal ultrastructure: a preliminary investigation.

Authors:  Sally Hayes; Thamara A Cafaro; Patrycja J Boguslawska; Christina S Kamma-Lorger; Craig Boote; Jonathan Harris; Robert Young; Jennifer Hiller; Nicholas Terrill; Keith M Meek; Horacio M Serra
Journal:  Mol Vis       Date:  2011-11-26       Impact factor: 2.367

4.  Climatic Droplet Keratopathy in Argentina: Involvement of Environmental Agents in Its Genesis Which Would Open the Prospect for New Therapeutic Interventions.

Authors:  María Fernanda Suárez; Leandro Correa; Nicolás Crim; Evangelina Espósito; Rodolfo Monti; Julio Alberto Urrets-Zavalía; Horacio Marcelo Serra
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2015-09-16       Impact factor: 3.411

5.  Genetic background and climatic droplet keratopathy incidence in a Mapuche population from Argentina.

Authors:  Theodore G Schurr; Matthew C Dulik; Thamara A Cafaro; María F Suarez; Julio A Urrets-Zavalia; Horacio M Serra
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-09-05       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total

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