Purpose: Brown-McLean syndrome (BMS) is a clinical condition characterized by peripheral corneal edema with central corneal transparency. This study aims to document the tomographic and biomechanical characteristics of 3 patients with typical BMS features using the Pentacam® AXL and CORVIS ST® (Oculus Optikgeräte GmbH, Wetzlar, Germany).
Observations: Three cases of BMS are presented. Case 1 involves a 26-year-old male, Case 2 a 55-year-old male, and Case 3 a 74-year-old male. The patients in Cases 1 and 3 had bilateral BMS, while the patient in Case 2 had BMS in the right eye and aphakic bullous keratopathy in the left eye. All three patients were aphakic following cataract surgery. Notably, Cases 1 and 2 were first-degree relatives (son and father), both with bilateral microspherophakia and resultant bilateral aphakia from pediatric cataract surgery. Tomographic analysis revealed a consistent increase in corneal thickness from the center to the periphery in BMS eyes, marked by an abrupt rise in the corneal thickness spatial profile (CTSP) and percentage thickness increase (PTI) curves from the thinnest point towards the periphery. There was no loss of parallel isopachs, no displacement of the thinnest point of the cornea, and no evidence of focal posterior corneal surface depression, typical signs of generalized corneal edema. Biomechanically, BMS eyes exhibited relatively normal corneal stiffness, integrated radius, Ambrósio's relational thickness to the horizontal profile (ARTh), and maximum deformation amplitude ratio at 2mm from the corneal apex (DA ratio). However, the left eye of the patient in Case 2, which had aphakic bullous keratopathy, showed altered biomechanical parameters indicative of a softer cornea with loss of rigidity.
Conclusions And Importance: This case series is the first to evaluate the biomechanical and tomographic features of eyes with BMS. Despite the abrupt rise in CTSP and PTI curves from the thinnest point towards the periphery, the relatively normal central corneal biomechanical indices in these BMS eyes are expected when edema is limited to the periphery. These indices become abnormal when there is progression to central corneal edema with bullous keratopathy.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11359765 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajoc.2024.102136 | DOI Listing |
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