• Title of article

    Corneal Alterations Associated with Pseudoexfoliation Syndrome and Glaucoma: A Literature Review

  • Author/Authors

    Palko, Joel R Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences - Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine - St. Louis - MO, USA , Qi, Owen Department of Internal Medicine - Mercy Hospital - St. Louis - MO, USA , Sheybani, Arsham Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences - Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine - St. Louis - MO, USA

  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    312
  • To page
    324
  • Abstract
    A systematic literature review was performed evaluating articles examining the effects of pseudoexfoliation syndrome (PEX) and glaucoma (PEXG) on the cornea with a focus on the corneal endothelium. We searched for articles relevant to pseudoexfoliation syndrome, pseudoexfoliation glaucoma and corneal endothelial cell counts using Pubmed, Google Scholar Database, Web of Science and Cochrane Library databases published prior to September of 2016. We then screened the references of these retrieved papers and performed a Web of Science cited reference search. Corneal characteristics analyzed included central corneal thickness (CCT), corneal nerve density, endothelial cell density (ECD), polymegathism, and pleomorphism. These parameters were compared in the following populations: control, PEX, PEXG, and primary open angle glaucoma (POAG). Over 30 observational studies were reviewed. Most studies showed a statistically significant lower ECD in PEX and PEXG populations compared to controls. Overall, PEX eyes had a non‑statistically significant trend of lower ECDs compared to PEXG eyes. No consistent trends were found when analyzing differences in CCT amongst control, PEX and PEXG groups. For the few studies that looked at corneal nerve characteristics, the control groups were found to have statistically significantly greater nerve densities than PEX eyes, which had significantly greater densities than PEXG eyes. ECD and corneal nerve densities may be potential metrics for risk‑stratifying patients with PEX and PEXG. Our literature review provided further evidence of the significant negative influence PEX has on the cornea, worsening as patients convert to PEXG.
  • Keywords
    Pseudoexfoliation Syndrome , Pseudoexfoliation Glaucoma , Endothelial Cell Density , Corneal Nerve Density
  • Journal title
    Astroparticle Physics
  • Serial Year
    2017
  • Record number

    2431806