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Original Article

Sided effects of bicarbonate on rabbit corneal endothelium in vitro

Pages 168-177 | Received 23 Apr 2009, Accepted 30 Jul 1987, Published online: 15 Apr 2021
 

Abstract

Stroma‐endothelium preparations from albino rabbits were studied either in a specular microscope (and measurements made of corneal thinning under silicone oil) or mounted between two half‐chambers (to permit direct measurement of endothelial fluid pump activity). Preparations were first equilibrated with bicarbonate‐Ringer solutions (supplemented with glucose, adenosine and glutathione and equilibrated with 5% CO2‐air). If the preparations were equilibrated with a low (2 mM) level of bicarbonate on the stromal side and variable levels (2 to 50 mM) of bicarbonate on the endothelial side, corneal thinning increased with bicarbonate concentration while fluid pump was found to be constant from 2 to 35 mM bicarbonate. In contrast, if the preparations were equilibrated with a low (2 mM) bicarbonate level on the endothelial side and 2 to 50 mM bicarbonate on the stromal aspect, corneal thinning did not occur but fluid pump declined gradually as a function of stromal bicarbonate levels. These results contrast sharply with the significant corneal thinning and fluid pump that can be measured if both sides of the preparations are equilibrated with 35 mM bicarbonate. These results further emphasise that bicarbonate ions do not simply serve to drive an endothelium‐sited fluid pump in the mammalian cornea.

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