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Intraocular pressure modulation with thermal stimuli
Oliveira, Thiago Carvalho Barros de; Ferreira, Juliana de Lucena Martins; Lima, Hissa Tavares de; Bezerra Filho, Carlos Otávio de Arruda; Ribeiro, Joao Crispim.
Affiliation
  • Oliveira, Thiago Carvalho Barros de; Instituto Cearense de Oftalmologia. Fortaleza. BR
  • Ferreira, Juliana de Lucena Martins; Centro Universitário Christus. Department of Ophthalmology. Fortaleza. BR
  • Lima, Hissa Tavares de; Universidade Estadual do Ceará. Department of Ophthalmology. Fortaleza. BR
  • Bezerra Filho, Carlos Otávio de Arruda; Centro Universitário Christus. Department of Ophthalmology. Fortaleza. BR
  • Ribeiro, Joao Crispim; Instituto Cearense de Oftalmologia. Fortaleza. BR
Arq. bras. oftalmol ; Arq. bras. oftalmol;88(1): e2023, 2025. tab, graf
Article in En | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1568846
Responsible library: BR1.1
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACT

Purpose:

This study aimed to determine whether early-stage intraocular pressure can be modulated using a thermal face mask.

Methods:

In this prospective clinical study, healthy participants were randomized on a 111 allocation ratio to three mask groups hypothermic (G1), normothermic (G2), and hyperthermic (G3). After randomization, 108 eyes from 108 participants were submitted to clinical evaluations, including measurement of initial intraocular pressure (T1). The thermal mask was then applied for 10 minutes, followed by a second evaluation of intraocular pressure (T2) and assessment of any side effects.

Results:

The hypothermic group (G1) showed a significant reduction in mean intraocular pressure between T1 (16.97 ± 2.59 mmHg) and T2 (14.97 ± 2.44 mmHg) (p<0.001). G2 showed no significant pressure difference between T1 (16.50 ± 2.55 mmHg) and T2 (17.00 ± 2.29 mmHg) (p=0.054). G3 showed a significant increase in pressure from T1 (16.53 ± 2.69 mmHg) to T2 (18.58 ± 2.95 mmHg) (p<0.001). At T1, there was no difference between the three study groups (p=0.823), but at T2, the mean values of G3 were significantly higher than those of G1 and G2 (p<0.00).

Conclusion:

Temperature was shown to significantly modify intraocular pressure. Thermal masks allow the application of temperature in a controlled, reproducible manner. Further studies are needed to assess the duration of these effects and whether they are reproducible in patients with pathologies that affect intraocular pressure.
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: LILACS Language: En Journal: Arq Bras Oftalmol / Arq. bras. oftalmol / Arq. bras. oftalmol. (Online) / Arquivos brasileiros de oftalmologia (Impresso) Journal subject: OFTALMOLOGIA Year: 2025 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Brasil Country of publication: Brasil

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: LILACS Language: En Journal: Arq Bras Oftalmol / Arq. bras. oftalmol / Arq. bras. oftalmol. (Online) / Arquivos brasileiros de oftalmologia (Impresso) Journal subject: OFTALMOLOGIA Year: 2025 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Brasil Country of publication: Brasil