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Dry eye is a chronic medical condition that develops when the eye's tear film does not lubricate and protect the eye's outer surface.
The cornea is the clear front layer of the eye that serves as a protective barrier and the first point of entry for light into the eye. Its health is crucial to sight. The cornea bends light, which passes through an opening in the colorful iris, called the pupil, and then through the lens, which further focuses the light onto the retina. There, light is translated by photoreceptor cells into visual information that is conveyed to the brain via the optic nerve, where it is interpreted as vision.
Corneal damage is a leading cause of blindness worldwide, but especially in less developed countries. Corneal clouding or scarring can result in glared or blurred vision.
The causes of corneal damage include injuries to the outermost layer of the cornea, damage or scars from other eye surgeries, infections, hereditary corneal defects, and inflammation from chronic dry eye. Symptoms of corneal damage and dry eye can include pain, tearing, light sensitivity, blurred vision, and a feeling that something is in the eye. Treatments include lubricating eye drops and ointments, patches for protection from irritation, antibiotics, anti-inflammatory eye drops, and special contact lenses to bandage the cornea.
Corneal transplants are often needed when vision cannot be corrected with other treatments.
Researchers funded by Research to Prevent Blindness (RPB) are working to better understand the corneal wound healing process in order to develop new strategies for transplantation and other treatments for corneal damage.
More than 40,000 corneal transplants are performed each year in the U.S., making it the most common type of transplant. Although most transplants are initially successful, some fail due to rejection of the transplanted cornea by the body’s immune system. RPB-supported researchers are also investigating ways to increase the success rate of corneal transplants.