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Transepithelial corneal collagen cross-linking in keratoconus.

Journal of refractive surgery (Thorofare, N.J. : 1995) (2010-02-20)
Antonio Leccisotti, Tahmina Islam
ABSTRACT

To evaluate the clinical effects of transepithelial corneal cross-linking (CXL) on keratoconic eyes pre-treated with substances enhancing epithelial permeability. Prospective, consecutive, single-masked, paired-eye study on 51 patients. The eye with more severe keratoconus was treated; the fellow eye served as the control. Gentamicin, benzalkonium chloride, and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid were instilled for 3 hours, then oxybuprocaine for 30 minutes. Riboflavin 0.1% in 20% dextran T500 and oxybuprocaine were instilled for 30 minutes. Finally, ultraviolet A irradiation to the central 7.5 mm of the cornea was applied for 30 minutes, while riboflavin was instilled every 5 minutes. Mean corrected distance visual acuity improved by 0.036 logMAR after CXL and worsened by 0.039 logMAR in the control eyes (P<.05). Safety index was 1.05 after CXL and 0.96 in the control group. Mean spherical equivalent refraction decreased by 0.35 D (less myopic) after CXL and increased by 0.83 diopters (D) in the control eyes (P<.05). Mean apex curvature on tangential videokeratography increased by 0.51 D after CXL and by 1.61 D in the control eyes (P=.16). Mean average simulated keratometry decreased by 0.10 D after CXL and increased by 0.88 D in the control eyes (P<.05). Mean index of surface variance increased (worsened) by 0.9 after CXL and 5.3 in the control eyes (P<.05). Mean endothelial cell density was unchanged. A limited but favorable effect of transepithelial CXL was noted on keratoconic eyes, without complications. The effect appears to be less pronounced than described in the literature after CXL with de-epithelialization.

MATERIALS
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Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Benoxinate hydrochloride, meets USP testing specifications