Publication | Closed Access
Tear film osmolality determination: An evaluation of potential errors in measurement
63
Citations
9
References
1986
Year
The technique of tear film osmolality determination using a nanoliter freezing point depression type osmometer was studied to determine what factors affect the accuracy of the technique. Reflex tearing during microcapillary sampling of the tears caused a 5% decrease in tear film osmolality. Evaporation effects of sampling, retrieval and osmolality determination of samples resulted in an increase of 0.2% for one microliter volumes and 1.2% and 1.3% for 0.50 and 0.25 microliter volumes of samples, respectively. Evaporation of the sample during storage between layers of immersion oil resulted in increasing osmolalities of 0.5, 0.2 and 0.2%/day for sample volumes of 0.25, 0.50 and 1.0 microliter respectively over 14 days. Samples (1.0 microliter) stored at 4 degrees C showed an increase in osmolality of 1.25 mos/kg/day. These results suggest that reflex tearing is one major source of variation in tear film osmolality determinations and that avoidance of reflex tearing is critical to the accuracy of the technique.
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