Laser induced thermal injury of rabbit cornea and treatment with anti-inflammatory agents

Doc Ophthalmol. 1985 Apr 30;59(3):277-99. doi: 10.1007/BF00159265.

Abstract

A moderately severe thermal injury of the central cornea of 48 Dutch-belted rabbit eyes was produced with a carbon (CO2) laser. The lesions were photographed with a slit lamp (SL) camera immediately following the injury and at 1, 2, 4, 7, 14, 21, 30 and 60 days after the exposure. Lesion size, opaqueness, and depth were graded clinically by SL biomicroscopy at the same intervals. No significant differences were found (p less than or equal to 0.05) between groups of eyes treated with flurbiprofen (0.03%), prednisolone acetate (1%), and vehicle control four-times-a-day for three weeks following injury. Additionally, eyes were studied histopathologically at 3 and 60 days following injury by light and transmission electron microscopy, and clinically at 30 and 60 days by endothelial specular microscopy. Important clinical and histopathological findings included coagulative necrosis of the corneal epithelium, epithelial sloughing, fusion of stromal collagen, stromal edema and inflammatory cell infiltration, stromal scar formation, corneal thinning, endothelial hyperplasia and metaplasia, fibrinous anterior chamber reaction with hypopyon, and retrocorneal fibrous membrane formation.

MeSH terms

  • Administration, Topical
  • Animals
  • Anti-Inflammatory Agents / therapeutic use*
  • Cornea / pathology
  • Corneal Injuries*
  • Drug Evaluation, Preclinical
  • Flurbiprofen / therapeutic use
  • Lasers / adverse effects*
  • Prednisolone / analogs & derivatives
  • Prednisolone / therapeutic use
  • Rabbits

Substances

  • Anti-Inflammatory Agents
  • Flurbiprofen
  • prednisolone acetate
  • Prednisolone