Abstract

The purpose of this study was to use a portable optical coherence tomography (OCT) for characterization of corneal stromal striae (CSS) in an ovine animal model and human corneas with histological correlation, in order to evaluate their architectural pattern by image analysis. Forty-six eyes from female adult sheep (older than 2 years), and 12 human corneas, were included in our study. The eyes were examined in situ by a portable OCT, without enucleation. All OCT scans were performed immediately after death, and then the eyes were delivered to a qualified histology laboratory. In the ovine animal model, CSS were detected with OCT in 89.1% (41/46) of individual scans and in 93.4% (43/46) of histological slices. In human corneas, CSS were found in 58.3% (7/12) of cases. In both corneal types, CSS appeared as “V”- or “X”-shaped structures, with very similar angle values of 70.8° ± 4° on OCT images and 71° ± 4° on histological slices (p ≤ 0.01). Data analysis demonstrated an excellent degree of reproducibility and inter-rater reliability of measurements (p < 0.001). The present study demonstrated that by using a portable OCT device, CSS can be visualized in ovine and human corneas. This finding suggests their generalized presence in various mammals. The frequent observation, close to 60%, of such collagen texture in the corneal stroma, similar to a ‘truss bridge’ design, permits to presume that it plays an important structural role, aimed to distribute tensile and compressive forces in various directions, conferring resilience properties to the cornea.

Highlights

  • The purpose of this study was to use a portable optical coherence tomography (OCT) for characterization of corneal stromal striae (CSS) in an ovine animal model and human corneas with histological correlation, in order to evaluate their architectural pattern by image analysis

  • CSS differ from other corneal striae such as Vogt’s striae observed in keratoconus, vertical striae associated with contact lens-induced corneal edema, diabetes-associated striae, and idiopathic Descemet’s membrane wrinkles, striae associated with LASIK flap or SMILE Lasik technique, all of which are vertical in orientation, but lacking a criss-cross design

  • The data of our study demonstrated the existence of CSS in a new animal model (i.e. Ovis aries), suggesting their ubiquity in different mammalian species

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Summary

Introduction

The purpose of this study was to use a portable optical coherence tomography (OCT) for characterization of corneal stromal striae (CSS) in an ovine animal model and human corneas with histological correlation, in order to evaluate their architectural pattern by image analysis. Corneal stromal striae (CSS) are fine colorless lines in the central cornea that depart from Descemet’s membrane and extend in a vertical or near-vertical direction to end in the mid or anterior stroma, or even Bowman’s layer. They were first described as glassy corneal striae (GCS) by Sturrock in 1973 in normal human corneas by means of slit-lamp b­ iomicroscopy[1]. In a recent study of Grieve and coll., CSS have been described in humans and in two other mammals, macaque and mouse, by means of histology, scanning electron microscopy, OCT, and full-field optical coherence tomography (FFOCT)[2]

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