LONG‐TERM EFFECTS OF A SINGLE DOSE OF ULTRAVIOLET‐B ON ALBINO RABBIT CORNEA‐I. in vivo ANALYSES

Abstract
Both eyes of female albino rabbits (1.9 kg) were exposed to a single dose of UV-B (300 .+-. 9 nm; 0.125 J/cm2 total dose) between 13.30 and 15.00 h. The average irradiance was 209 .+-. 4 .mu.W/cm2 delivered over 612 .+-. 13 s. At various time periods thereafter (every 12 h for 3 days, 6, 7, 14, 28, 42, 56, 112, 224 and 336 days post-irradiation), the animals were subjected to a full slit lamp examination to evaluate the status of the cornea and the anterior segment along with optical or ultrasonic pachometry of central corneal thickness. The results were compared with studies on age-matched rabbits over the same time period. In response to the UV-B irradiation, the corneas showed a modest edema (20% increase in central corneal thickness) that peaked at 48 h. Nearly normal central corneal thickness returned in 6 days and followed by a secondary very slight swelling (< 5%) that resolved by 14 days. The edema was accompanied by keratitis over the same period. Thereafter, both control and UV-B irradiated corneas progressively increased in thickness with age. Biomicroscopy also revealed the appearance of granular opacities in the corneal epithelium that peaked at 72-96 h and resolved over 28 days. In addition, very small microdot opacities of the corneal epithelium were present in the UV-B irradiated corneas that reached maximum at 72 h but persisted to some degree throughout the evaluation period. Biomicroscopy also revealed a progressive disruption of the homogeneous nature of the corneal stroma by the appearance of large ''bread crumb''-like opacities that started at 72 h and was still present at the end of the evaluation period. These results suggest that long-term evaluation of the cornea is important after acute UV-B exposure and indicate that acute exposure to UV-R can product corneal changes resembling those reported following chronic exposure to UV-R-rich environments.