rss
Br J Ophthalmol 1991;75:348-352 doi:10.1136/bjo.75.6.348
  • Research Article

Measurement of aqueous cells and flare in normal eyes.

  1. S M Shah,
  2. D J Spalton and
  3. S E Smith
  1. Medical Eye Unit, St. Thomas's Hospital, London.

      Abstract

      (abstractThe Kowa laser cell flare meter has been recently introduced to quantify the assessment of aqueous cells and flare in vivo by measurement of light scattering from a low power HeNe beam. Computer analysis of this scattered light can distinguish cells (expressed as cell count) from protein (expressed as photon count/ms), and in-vitro work with albumin solutions has shown that the photon count/ms is linearly related to protein concentration. This study of 106 normal eyes (53 subjects) assesses the accuracy and sensitivity of the instrument and the factors affecting the interpretation of its results. Using in-vitro solutions of human albumin we found a highly significant linear correlation (r = 1, p = 0.0001) between photon count and protein concentration. The results show that the instrument has a photon count/ms reproducibility of 8.26% and that there is a within-subject variability in photon count/ms (aqueous flare) of 12.2% in normal eyes. No significant difference in photon count/ms (aqueous flare) was found to exist between right and left eyes (p greater than 0.4), between sexes (p greater than 0.5), or between irides of different colour (p greater than 0.8). There was also no statistically significant variation in photon counts/ms with time of day over the period of measurement (1000-1900 h) (p = 0.4). There was, however, an increase in photon count/ms with age (r = 0.57, p less than 0.001) and a decrease with pupillary dilatation at both 30 and 60 minutes after instillation of tropicamide 1% (p less than 0.05). An occasional cell was found in only 10.4% of normal eyes, and there was no significant increase in the cell counts on mydriasis (p>0.05). These findings indicate that the Kowa laser flare meter is an accurate and sensitive instrument with potential application in the investigation of blood-aqueous barrier.

      This Article

      Services

      1. Request permissions

      Responses

      1. Submit a response
      2. No responses published

      Social bookmarking

      Register for free content


      Free sample
      This recent issue is free to all users to allow everyone the opportunity to see the full scope and typical content of BJO.
      View free sample issue >>

      Free archive
      The full back archive is now available for BJO. Institutional subscribers may access the entire archive as part of their subscription. Personal subscribers will also have access to all content when logged in. Non-subscribers who register have free access to all articles published before 2006, back to volume 1 issue 1.
      Register to access the free archive >>

      Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.