RESUMO
This study was aimed at investigating the changes occurring in superficial corneal epithelium (localized or diffuse, dotted or linear) as observed in 300 eyes after macrodacryography with iodate contrast media (iodized oil and water soluble non-ionic agents). In our opinion, the causes of iatrogenic short-life keratitis are: needle injury, the deposition of iodate contrast medium on the cornea and the reduction of palpebral winking, favoring dry eye, due to superficial anesthesia. The pharmacologic protection of the cornea by means of high-viscosity drugs allows both the number and the degree of keratitis to be markedly reduced. Therefore, contrast media must be chosen on the basis of anamnestic and clinical data, as well as of patient's symptoms, focusing mainly on the characteristics of the various agents--i.e., density, concentration, viscosity.
Assuntos
Óleo Iodado/efeitos adversos , Iopamidol/efeitos adversos , Ceratite/induzido quimicamente , Aparelho Lacrimal/diagnóstico por imagem , Humanos , Incidência , Ceratite/epidemiologia , Ceratite/prevenção & controle , Radiografia , ViscosidadeRESUMO
This study was aimed at investigating the changes in corneal epithelium caused by dacryocystography. Such changes can be either chemical--from iodate contrast media (iodized oil and water-soluble non-ionic cm)--or physical--from needle or catheter. Twenty-five patients (50 eyes) were studied using BUT, Schirmer tests, biomicroscopy, and pachymetry. Follow-ups immediately after dacryocystography demonstrated superficial keratitis, which was less severe with water-soluble non-ionic cm. Such lesions were hardly ever observed in patients who had been treated with dacriosol ointment on the cornea just before the X-ray exam. Follow-ups at 24 hours showed the superficial keratitis to have disappeared in all patients, independent of the kind of cm employed and of the ophthalmic ointment applied to the cornea.