Acute effects of ultraviolet-B irradiation on the corneal surface of the pigmented rabbit studied by quantitative scanning electron microscopy

2009 
. The eyes of female pigmented rabbits were exposed to a single dose of UV-B (300 + 9 nm, 0.05 J/cm2 total dose) between 13.30 and 15.00 h. The average irradiance was 225 + 36 μW/cm2 delivered over 191 to 264 s. At various time periods thereafter (24, 48, 72 and 96 h post-irradiation), the animals were euthanized by pentobarbital overdose and the eyes fixed with 2% glutaraldehyde in 80 mM cacodylate buffer (pH 7.4, total osmolarity of 330–340 mOsm/L). Corneal quadrants were examined by high resolution scanning electron microscopy at 100 × and 500 × at-stage magnification at central, mid-peripheral and peripheral sites. The micographs from the central cornea were subjected to a quantitative analysis using a computer based digitization system. A peak effect was observed at 48 h at which cellular exfoliation was noted at the corneal apex. In the region immediately adjacent to the exfoliating cells, the number of light and dark electron reflex cells decreased to 48 h while the numbers of medium-reflex cells decreased after 48 h. The relative surface area of all cells was also decreased at 48 h compared to unirradiated controls. Significant recovery was observed by 96 h. Mid-peripheral and peripheral sites were largely unaffected by this just supra-threshold irradiation.
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