Abstract

UVA/riboflavin corneal cross-linking (CXL) is a common used approach to treat progressive keratoconus. This study aims to investigate the alteration of corneal stiffness following CXL by mimicking the inflation of the eye under the in vivo loading conditions. Seven paired porcine eye globes were involved in the inflation test to examine the corneal behaviour. Cornea-only model was constructed using the finite element method, without considering the deformation contribution from sclera and limbus. Inverse analysis was conducted to calibrate the non-linear material behaviours in order to reproduce the inflation test. The corneal stress and strain values were then extracted from the finite element models and tangent modulus was calculated under stress level at 0.03 MPa. UVA/riboflavin cross-linked corneas displayed a significant increase in the material stiffness. At the IOP of 27.25 mmHg, the average displacements of corneal apex were 307 ± 65 μm and 437 ± 63 μm (p = 0.02) in CXL and PBS corneas, respectively. Comparisons performed on tangent modulus ratios at a stress of 0.03 MPa, the tangent modulus measured in the corneas treated with the CXL was 2.48 ± 0.69, with a 43±24% increase comparing to its PBS control. The data supported that corneal material properties can be well-described using this inflation methods following CXL. The inflation test is valuable for investigating the mechanical response of the intact human cornea within physiological IOP ranges, providing benchmarks against which the numerical developments can be translated to clinic.

Highlights

  • Research in corneal cross-linking (CXL) has gradually developed a tool that became the firstline treatment for treating keratoconus

  • By providing the pressures from posterior pole to the corneal apex with respect to intraocular pressure (IOP), the measurements of displacement indicate the response of the eye globes

  • Porcine eyes were used to investigate the biomechanical behavior over the entire cornea, whole eye globes were used in generating the corneal finite element (FE) model

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Summary

Introduction

Research in corneal cross-linking (CXL) has gradually developed a tool that became the firstline treatment for treating keratoconus. The prevalence of this disease ranges from 1 in 375 in the general population [1]). This technique creates new covalent cross-links between molecules and extracellular matrix within stroma to strengthen and stabilize the structure of cornea. Experimental evaluation of stiffening induced by corneal cross-linking

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