Publication | Closed Access
Collagenous deposits on explanted intraocular lenses
20
Citations
16
References
1992
Year
Collagenous DepositsVitreous BodyOphthalmologyIris TissueSurgical PathologyHistopathologyProteinaceous DepositsCytoskeletonIntraocular LensesGlaucomaDermatologyOcular PathologyMedicineOcular TissueExtracellular Matrix
An immunohistochemical study of type I collagen in deposits on the surface of two intraocular lenses (IOLs) explanted from human eyes was conducted. Type I collagen-immunoreactive proteinaceous deposits with cells were found around the haptics of an iris-supported IOL. A few such deposits and what appeared to be macrophages were observed on the optic. A few cells (presumably macrophages and giant cells) were observed on a posterior chamber IOL, whereas proteinaceous deposits that reacted positively to the antibody were not identified. Type I collagen-immunoreactive deposits on the iris-supported IOL were thought to be the products of fibroblastic cells, originating from iris tissue, that attached directly to the haptics and helped stabilize the implant.
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