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TFOS DEWS II pathophysiology report

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TLDR
The TFOS DEWS II Pathophysiology Subcommittee reviewed the mechanisms involved in the initiation and perpetuation of dry eye disease, finding the targeting of the terminal duct in meibomian gland disease and the influence of gaze dynamics and the closed eye state on tear stability and ocular surface inflammation to be important.
Abstract
The TFOS DEWS II Pathophysiology Subcommittee reviewed the mechanisms involved in the initiation and perpetuation of dry eye disease. Its central mechanism is evaporative water loss leading to hyperosmolar tissue damage. Research in human disease and in animal models has shown that this, either directly or by inducing inflammation, causes a loss of both epithelial and goblet cells. The consequent decrease in surface wettability leads to early tear film breakup and amplifies hyperosmolarity via a Vicious Circle. Pain in dry eye is caused by tear hyperosmolarity, loss of lubrication, inflammatory mediators and neurosensory factors, while visual symptoms arise from tear and ocular surface irregularity. Increased friction targets damage to the lids and ocular surface, resulting in characteristic punctate epithelial keratitis, superior limbic keratoconjunctivitis, filamentary keratitis, lid parallel conjunctival folds, and lid wiper epitheliopathy. Hybrid dry eye disease, with features of both aqueous deficiency and increased evaporation, is common and efforts should be made to determine the relative contribution of each form to the total picture. To this end, practical methods are needed to measure tear evaporation in the clinic, and similarly, methods are needed to measure osmolarity at the tissue level across the ocular surface, to better determine the severity of dry eye. Areas for future research include the role of genetic mechanisms in non-Sjogren syndrome dry eye, the targeting of the terminal duct in meibomian gland disease and the influence of gaze dynamics and the closed eye state on tear stability and ocular surface inflammation.

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Citations
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Understanding the adsorption and potential tear film stability properties of recombinant human lubricin and bovine submaxillary mucins in an in vitro tear film model.

TL;DR: It is shown that both recombinant human lubricin (rh-lubricin) and BSM solutions render surfaces hydrophilic and when the fluid films reach 500 nm or less, the fluids resist evaporation-driven breakup through a volumetric flux across the surface, which is believed to be due to evapation-driven solutocapillary flows.
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The Influence of Work Environment Factors on the OcularSurface in a One-Year Follow-Up Prospective Clinical Study.

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of environmental working conditions on the symptoms and signs of dry eye disease and whether and how those conditions impact the ocular surface was examined, and a single-center, prospective clinical study with a 1-year follow-up included 150 patients.
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Diverse meibum lipids produced by Awat1 and Awat2 are important for stabilizing tear film and protecting the ocular surface

TL;DR: In this article, the authors created single and double knockout mice for the two acyl-CoA wax alcohol acyltransferases (Awat1 and Awat2) and investigated their dry eye phenotypes and meibum lipid composition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Histopathology and selective biomarker expression in human meibomian glands.

TL;DR: The histopathological features of meibomian gland (MG) tissue from cadaver donors are examined to identify potential pathogenic processes that underlie MGD in humans, and potentially distinct pathogenic mechanisms in MGD are suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Randomized trial of topical periocular castor oil treatment for blepharitis.

TL;DR: The favourable therapeutic profile would suggest that castor oil demonstrates promise as a potential treatment for blepharitis, and support further efficacy trials with longer follow up.
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