AI Article Synopsis

  • Dry eye disease is a common issue that impacts quality of life and poses challenges in eye care, requiring effective research models for treatment development.
  • This study compared two rodent models for dry eye disease, induced by benzalkonium chloride (evaporative dry eye) and scopolamine (aqueous deficient dry eye), and assessed their recovery over a seven-day period after inducing the conditions.
  • Findings revealed chronic inflammation in the cornea and lacrimal glands from both models, with persistent symptoms even after stopping the inducing agents, highlighting their value for future drug discovery and treatment evaluation.

Article Abstract

Dry eye disease is a highly prevalent ocular condition that significantly affects the quality of life and presents a major challenge in ophthalmology. Animal models play a crucial role in investigating the pathophysiology and developing effective treatments. The goal of this study was to compare and standardize two dry eye disease rodent models and explore their recovery aspects. We have standardized benzalkonium chloride and scopolamine-induced dry eye disease models which represents two different classes of the dry eye i.e., evaporative dry eye and aqueous deficient dry eye, respectively. After the development of dry eye conditions, a self-recovery period of seven days was granted to assess the reversal of the induced changes. The dry eye condition was assessed by measuring tear volume, corneal slit lamp imaging, and histological examination of the cornea, the lacrimal and the harderian gland. The study indicated the development of chronic inflammation of the cornea and lacrimal gland in the case of benzalkonium after five days of the treatment, while the scopolamine treated group showed chronic inflammation of the lacrimal gland after five days and corneal inflammation after seven days of administration. The recovery study suggested that after discontinuation of inducing agent, the dry eye symptoms were still persistent suggesting the utility of the model in evaluating dry eye treatments. The study highlights the comparative changes in both models along with recovery which can serve as a base for drug discovery and development against dry eye disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lfs.2023.121463DOI Listing

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