Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of head trauma on corneal endothelial cell density (ECD) in eye bank donors 50 years or older. Methods: This is a retrospective study of 128 corneas from 67 donors 50 years or older with cause of death secondary to head trauma, gunshot wound to the head (n = 26), motor vehicle accident with head trauma (n = 33), a fall with sustained head trauma (n = 47), and non-head trauma–related deaths (n = 22). Corneal data were recovered from Saving Sight Eye Bank (Kansas City, MO) database between January 2018 and August 2021. Donor characteristics, ECD, and focal endothelial cell loss on specular microscopy were examined between groups. A linear mixed effects model and a mixed effects logistic regression were used to compare ECD and examine the association between head trauma and focal endothelial cell loss. Results: The average ECD in the head trauma group was 2471 ± 342 cells/mm2 and 2588 ± 282 cells/mm2 in the nonhead trauma group (P value = 0.24). After adjusting for age, death-to-preservation time, and pseudophakia, the ECD difference between the head trauma and nonhead trauma groups was −105 ± 112 cells/mm2 (P value = 0.35). The odds of having focal endothelial cell loss were not statistically significant (P value = 0.42) between the head trauma (odds = 0.93) and nonhead trauma (odds = 0.69) groups. Conclusions: There were no differences in ECD and focal endothelial cell loss between the head trauma and nonhead trauma groups in eye bank donors 50 years or older.

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