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Lissamine Green Staining in the Clinical Diagnosis of Xerophthalmia
21
Citations
3
References
1979
Year
Lissamine Green StainingOcular DiseaseOphthalmologyNight BlindnessMedicineHistopathologyPathologyChemical PathologyToxicologyGlaucomaDermatologyClinical ChemistrySensitive TestLaboratory MedicineOcular PathologyPigment
Lissamine green staining of the conjunctiva, a new and widely heralded aid for diagnosing early xerophthalmia, was found to be a reasonably specific but inadequately sensitive test for practical use. While 82% of clinically normal children failed to show staining, so did 57% with night blindness, 29% with vitamin A responsive Bitot's spots, and, most significantly, 26% with severe, vitamin A related corneal involvement. The test also failed to distinguish vitamin A responsive "Bitot's spots" from nonresponsive ones.
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