PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2023

Analysis of Biomechanical Response After Corneal Crosslinking with Different Fluence Levels in Porcine Corneas

Fischinger I, Reifeltshammer SA, et al.

Current Eye Research

Johannes Kepler University Linz, University of Bern, Saarland University, Kepler University Hospital, University of Düsseldorf

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study investigated the mechanical stiffening effects of corneal crosslinking (CXL) at varying UV-A fluence levels in porcine corneas. Ninety eyes were treated with different total fluences (5.4–20 J/cm²) to evaluate dose-dependent biomechanical changes. Stress–strain tests demonstrated a significant increase in stiffness with higher fluence levels, achieving up to 76% greater stress compared to controls at 10% strain. The Young’s modulus increased from 1.62 MPa in controls to 2.85 MPa at 20 J/cm². These results establish a strong dose–response relationship between UV exposure and corneal rigidity, suggesting that higher fluence levels may compensate for reduced efficacy in accelerated or transepithelial CXL procedures.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

UStretch

The CellScale UStretch system was used for uniaxial stress–strain testing of porcine corneal strips following UV-A crosslinking. Equipped with a 1 N load cell, the device measured mechanical response up to 10% strain under controlled hydration conditions. The UStretch provided high-precision force–displacement data used to calculate Young’s modulus and validate the fluence-dependent stiffening effect, making it integral to quantifying biomechanical outcomes of different CXL protocols.
AUTHORS

Isaak Fischinger; Sophia A. Reifeltshammer; Theo G. Seiler; Malavika H. Nambiar; Maria A. Komninou; Philippe Büchler; Jascha Wendelstein; Achim Langenbucher; Matthias Bolz.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Current Eye Research

YEAR

2023

INSTITUTIONS

Johannes Kepler University Linz, University of Bern, Saarland University, Kepler University Hospital, University of Düsseldorf

COUNTRIES

Austria, Germany, Switzerland

INSTRUMENT USED

UStretch

TESTING METHODS

Hydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingTensile Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Ophthalmic Biomechanics & Corneal Tissue Engineering

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