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Original Article

Contact lens-induced edema in vitro – amelioration by lactate dehydrogenase inhibitors

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Pages 751-758 | Accepted 19 Aug 1986, Published online: 02 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Isolated rabbit corneas bathed in Krebs-bicarbonate Ringer solution were observed for thickness changes after a 90 minute equilibration period. Control corneas swelled an average of 0.5 /im/hr, and placement of a polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) contact lens on the epithelial surface caused the corneas to swell 24.5, um/hr, an effect similar to 0.5 mM epithelial cyanide exposure. The pronounced swelling induced by PMMA lens placement was much less however, in the epithelial presence of 3.2 mM sodium oxalate (3.22 jtm/hr) or 3.2 mM sodium oxamate (5.38 jum/hr). An equiosmotic excess of 4.8 mM NaCl was least active (15.89/jm/hr). On normal isolated corneas (without contact lenses), the Ringer containing an excess of 4.8 mM NaCl significantly deswelled the corneas (-13.44 im/hr), which contrasted with oxalate and oxamate containing Ringer solutions (1.17 and 1.33 m/hr respectively). The present study supports the notion that contact lens-induced edema results from stromal lactate accumulation, and suggests a potential alternative to osmotic therapy for its amelioration. These LDH inhibitors, in the concentrations used, have no acute osmotic or toxic effect on normal corneas vn vitro.

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