Electromechanical Cornea Reshaping for Refractive Vision Therapy.
Anna M StokolosaJack Thomas-ColwellKatelyn K DilleyYueqiao QuCharlotte CullipAndrew E HeidariMichelle HuangNathalie KerriganKellie HsuJack T LeonardKarthik R PrasadBrian J F WongMichael G HillPublished in: ACS biomaterials science & engineering (2023)
The corneal stroma consists of orthogonally stacked collagen-fibril lamellae that determine the shape of the cornea and provide most of the refractive power of the eye. We have applied electromechanical reshaping (EMR), an electrochemical platform for remodeling cartilage and other semirigid tissues, to change the curvature of the cornea as a potential procedure for nonsurgical vision correction. EMR relies on short electrochemical pulses to electrolyze water, with subsequent diffusion of protons into the extracellular matrix of collagenous tissues; protonation of immobilized anions within this matrix disrupts the ionic-bonding network, leaving the tissue transiently responsive to mechanical remodeling. Re-equilibration to physiological pH restores the ionic matrix, resulting in persistent shape change of the tissue. Using ex vivo rabbit eyes, we demonstrate here the controlled change of corneal curvature over a wide range of refractive powers with no loss of optical transparency. Optical coherence tomography (OCT), combined with second-harmonic generation (SHG) and confocal microscopy, establish that EMR enables extremely fine control of corneal contouring while maintaining the underlying macromolecular collagen structure and stromal cellular viability, positioning electrochemical vision therapy as a potentially simple and ultralow-cost modality for correcting routine refractive errors.
Keyphrases
- optical coherence tomography
- ionic liquid
- cataract surgery
- extracellular matrix
- wound healing
- gold nanoparticles
- diabetic retinopathy
- molecularly imprinted
- gene expression
- optic nerve
- air pollution
- high resolution
- clinical practice
- bone marrow
- high throughput
- emergency department
- stem cells
- patient safety
- risk assessment
- single cell
- cancer therapy
- solid state
- electronic health record
- electron transfer
- network analysis