Literature DB >> 30970122

Ocular surface evaluation in pediatric Hashimoto's thyroiditis without thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy.

Murat Gunay1, Gokhan Celik2, Elvin Yildiz3, Handan Bardak3, Heves Kirmizibekmez4, Nermin Koc5, Betul Onal Gunay6.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: We aimed to assess ocular surface characteristics in children with Hashimoto's thyroiditis without thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy and compare the results with those of healthy children.
METHODS: Twenty-two children with Hashimoto's thyroiditis (Group 1) and 20 healthy children without any ocular and/or systemic disorder (Group 2) were enrolled in the study. Ocular Surface Disease Index questionnaire, tear film osmolarity measurement (TearLab Osmolarity System, San Diego, CA, USA), Schirmer and tear film breakup time tests, meibography, and conjunctival brush cytology were performed and compared the results between the groups.
RESULTS: The study group included 19 girls and 3 boys in Group 1 and 12 girls and 8 boys in Group 2 (p=0.081). Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy was not identified in any of the patients. Mean tear film osmolarity was 310.23 ± 11.98 mOsm/l in Group 1 and 313.60 ± 15.03 mOsm/l in Group 2 (p=0.424). Mean Schirmer test score was lower in Group 1 (14.91 ± 6.27) compared with Group 2 (23.60 ± 5.63) (p=0.001). Mean tear film breakup time was lower in Group 1 (11.78 ± 4.07) compared with Group 2 (15.1 ± 1.6) (p=0.013). Moreover, mean meibomian gland area loss was 25.01% ± 10.04% in Group 1 and 16.54% ± 6.02% in Group 2 (p=0.002). Conjunctival cytologic analysis in Group 1 revealed grade 0 changes in 6 patients (27.3%), grade 1 changes in 14 patients (63.6%), and grade 2 changes in 2 patients (9.1%), whereas 18 patients (90%) had grade 0 changes and 2 patients (10%) had grade 1 changes (p=0.001) in Group 2.
CONCLUSIONS: The study demonstrates several ocular surface changes in children with Hashimoto's thyroiditis. These findings may indicate a tendency for dry eye in pediatric Hashimoto's thyroiditis patients without clinical evidence of thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 30970122     DOI: 10.5935/0004-2749.20190056

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arq Bras Oftalmol        ISSN: 0004-2749            Impact factor:   0.872


  1 in total

1.  High Prevalence of Abnormal Ocular Surface Tests in a Healthy Pediatric Population.

Authors:  William Rojas-Carabali; Pilar Uribe-Reina; Juliana Muñoz-Ortiz; Juan Pablo Terreros-Dorado; María Eugenia Ruiz-Botero; Nicolás Torres-Arias; Juliana Reyes-Guanes; Alejandra Rodriguez Zarante; Jose Y Arteaga-Rivera; Camilo Mosos; Ángela María Gutiérrez; Nicolás Molano-González; Guillermo Marroquín; Alejandra de-la-Torre
Journal:  Clin Ophthalmol       Date:  2020-10-22
  1 in total

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