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(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2002;43:82-86.)
© 2002 by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.

Linear Birefringence of the Central Human Cornea

Robert W. Knighton and Xiang-Run Huang

From Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida.

PURPOSE. To determine the polarization properties of the central cornea at perpendicular incidence in a normal human population on the assumption that the cornea behaves as a linear retarder.

METHODS. A corneal polarimeter provided a view of the fourth Purkinje image of a yellow (585 nm) light-emitting diode through crossed polarizers and a variable retarder. The Purkinje image was extinguished by adjusting the fast axis and retardance of the retarder to match the slow axis and double-pass retardance of the cornea. Both eyes of 73 normal subjects (49 women, 24 men; ages, 21–71 years) were measured. Correlations were expressed as Pearson’s r.

RESULTS. In most corneas the slow axis pointed nasally downward, with the peak of the axis distribution falling between 10° and 20° nasally downward. Double-pass corneal retardance varied widely (range, 0–250 nm); 80% of retardance values were uniformly distributed from 40 to 140 nm. Retardance was moderately correlated with axis (r {approx} 0.5), such that weaker retardance was associated with axes that were more nasally downward. Corneal birefringence was well correlated between the two eyes of a subject in both axis (r = 0.77) and retardance (r = 0.75).

CONCLUSIONS. The variation of corneal birefringence among individuals is substantial enough to produce large, uncontrolled differences in the polarization state of a measuring beam, differences that can introduce variability in newer technologies for ophthalmic diagnosis. The interocular similarity of corneal birefringence suggests deterministic control of corneal development.




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