Publications by authors named "D Oiland"

Contaminated allograft donor tissue represents a potential source of infection unique to keratoplasty. We prospectively studied perilimbal cultures of drowning victims over 30 months to determine if the ocular surface flora of drowning victims was unique. Twenty-eight donor eyes were cultured from 14 drowning victims.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Excessive traction during excision of donor corneoscleral buttons can result in damage or death to corneal endothelial cells. This damage manifests as multiple peripheral and, less commonly, central striae or stretch marks that correspond to linear opacities at the level of the endothelium. The striae consist of parallel lines of degenerate endothelium, each line three to eight cells wide, and stain readily with trypan blue, which is indicative of cell damage or death.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Thirty-two corneas with scleral rims were cultured from the eyes of 17 cadavers that harbored systemic infection at the time of death. Twelve (71%) of 17 cadavers demonstrated corneal contamination from one or both corneas. Eleven (92%) of 12 donors with positive postmortem blood cultures had positive corneal cultures from at least one eye.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF