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Cornea

Correlation between Corneal Endothelial Cell Density and Central Ocular Surface Temperature in Normal and Keratoconus Eyes

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Pages 445-451 | Received 18 Feb 2020, Accepted 06 Aug 2020, Published online: 27 Aug 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Purpose

In keratoconus (KC), an increase of the corneal back surface area may result in endothelial cell density (ECD) decrease and an increase of the corneal front surface area in ocular surface temperature (OST) decrease due to increased heat dissipation. Along with these hypotheses, we aimed to analyse the correlation between ECD and central corneal OST in patients with KC and healthy controls.

Patients and methods

A total of 154 eyes with KC (mean age 36.1 ± 12.5 years) and 92 healthy eyes (mean age 36.4 ± 12.8 years) were examined. Corneal front and back surface area at the central 5 mm corneal diameter (FSA and BSA) were calculated based on Pentacam measurement data:

FSA or BSA = 2×3.14×R(R-√R2-D/2)2,

where R referred to corneal front or back surface radius of curvature and D to the corneal front or back surface diameter (5 mm for the present study), respectively.

ECD was determined by specular microscopy (EM-3000) and central corneal OST by thermography (TG-1000).

Results

ECD was significantly lower in KC (2498 ± 356/mm2) patients than in controls (2638 ± 294/mm2; p < .001). FSA (20.35 ± 0.26 mm2 vs. 20.17 ± 0.03 mm2) and BSA (20.84 ± 0.58 mm2 vs. 20.45 ± 0.08 mm2) were significantly higher in KC patients than in controls (p = .001; p < .001), but the average central corneal OST did not differ significantly between both groups (34.2 ± 0.6°C vs.34.3 ± 0.7°C; p = .62). OST at the corneal centre correlated weakly, positively with ECD (r = 0.2; p < .05), but OST did not correlate with FSA (r = 0.045) or BSA (r = 0.064).

Conclusions

Endothelial cell density seems to have a mild impact on central ocular surface temperature in keratoconus and normal subjects. This effect is not correlated to the corneal front or back surface area.

Acknowledgments

The work of Dr Németh at the Dr Rolf M. Schwiete Center for Limbal Stem Cell and Congenital Aniridia Research was supported by a grant from the European Board of Ophthalmology. The work of Dr Szentmáry at the Dr Rolf M. Schwiete Center for Limbal Stem Cell and Congenital Aniridia Research was supported by the Dr Rolf M. Schwiete Foundation. The abstract of the manuscript was presented at the Congress of the German Ophthalmological Society (DOG) in 2019.

Disclosure statement

There is no conflict of interest to declare.

Disclaimer

The views expressed in the submitted article are the author’s own and not an official position of the institution or funder.

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