4.6 Article

Distribution of Young's Modulus in Porcine Corneas after Riboflavin/UVA-Induced Collagen Cross-Linking as Measured by Atomic Force Microscopy

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0088186

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Riboflavin/UVA-induced corneal collagen cross-linking has become an effective clinical application to treat keratoconus and other ectatic disorders of the cornea. Its beneficial effects are attributed to a marked stiffening of the unphysiologically weak stroma. Previous studies located the stiffening effect predominantly within the anterior cornea. In this study, we present an atomic force microscopy-derived analysis of the depth-dependent distribution of the Young's modulus with a depth resolution of 5 mu m in 8 cross-linked porcine corneas and 8 contralateral controls. Sagittal cryosections were fabricated from every specimen and subjected to force mapping. The mean stromal depth of the zone with effective cross-linking was found to be 219 +/- 67 mu m. Within this cross-linked zone, the mean Young's modulus declined from 49 +/- 18 kPa at the corneal surface to 46 +/- 17 kPa, 33 +/- 11 kPa, 17 +/- 5 kPa, 10 +/- 4 kPa and 10 +/- 4 kPa at stromal depth intervals of 0-50 mu m, 50-100 mu m, 100-150 mu m, 150-200 mu m and 200-250 mu m, respectively. This corresponded to a stiffening by a factor of 8.1 (corneal surface), 7.6 (0-50 mu m), 5.4 (50-100 mu m), 3.0 (100-150 mu m), 1.6 (150-200 mu m), and 1.5 (200-250 mu m), when compared to the Young's modulus of the posterior 100 mu m. The mean Young's modulus within the cross-linked zone was 20 +/- 8 kPa (2.9-fold stiffening), while it was 11 +/- 4 kPa (1.7-fold stiffening) for the entire stroma. Both values were significantly distinct from the mean Young's modulus obtained from the posterior 100 mu m of the cross-linked corneas and from the contralateral controls. In conclusion, we were able to specify the depth-dependent distribution of the stiffening effect elicited by standard collagen cross-linking in porcine corneas. Apart from determining the depth of the zone with effective corneal cross-linking, we also developed a method that allows for atomic force microscopy-based measurements of gradients of Young's modulus in soft tissues in general.

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