Abstract

Purpose. A major drawback of the mouse model of myopia is that the ocular dimensions cannot be measured in vivo, and that histological techniques post-mortem suffer from limited resolution. We have tested the potential of a newly developed technique, optical low coherence interferometry (OLCI), adapted for short measurement distances by Meditec, Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany (the “ACMaster”). Using this technique, ocular biometry was performed in mice with normal vision and after deprivation of form vision. Methods. Axial eye length, corneal thickness and anterior chamber depth were measured in 23 mice, aged 25–53 days, and standard deviations from repeated measurements in the same eyes, as well as intra-individual and inter-individual variability were determined in different age groups. The data were compared to those from a preceding study in which biometrical data were obtained from frozen sections [Vision Res. 44 (2004) 1857]. Refractions were measured by automated infrared photorefraction. Mice had either normal visual exposure or were monocularly deprived of form vision for 14 days. Results. Using OLCI, axial length could be determined with an average standard deviation of 8.0 ± 2.9 μm, corneal thickness with 3.5 ± 2.1 μm, and anterior chamber depth with 10.6 ± 12.3 μm. Neither axial length, nor corneal thickness, nor anterior chamber depth were significantly different in left and right eyes of individual mice that had normal visual experience (mean absolute difference between axial lengths: 17 ± 18 μm, between corneal thickness 5.1 ± 4.8 μm, and between anterior chamber depths 16.7 ± 14.8 μm). Compared to the variability that was previously found in frozen sections, the variability of axial length measurements with OLCI was 2.7 times less. After two weeks of form deprivation, OLCI revealed a significant axial elongation in the occluded eyes, compared to the contralateral fellow eyes (+38 ± 36 μm or 1.16%, p = 0.045, n = 7, paired t-test). In this sample, no accompanying myopic shift was observed in the occluded eyes but this observation is not unexpected given the inherently variable responses of mouse eye growth to visual deprivation. Conclusion. OLCI had sufficient resolution in living mice to detect axial length changes in vivo that were equivalent to a dioptric change of 2 D. Using this technique, it was confirmed that mouse eyes respond to form deprivation by axial elongation, similar to the eyes of other animal models. The lack of a myopic shift in this sample, despite the axial elongation, demonstrates that biometric data are particularly important when the mouse eye is used as a model to study myopia.

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