Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2699420 Contact Lens and Anterior Eye 2009 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

PurposeTo determine the effect of four marketed multipurpose contact lens solutions (MPSs) on corneal epithelial cell viability.MethodsComparison of the effect of MPS A (Renu MultiPlus, Bausch & Lomb), MPS B (OPTI-FREE Express, Alcon), MPS C (AQuify, CibaVision), and MPS D (OPTI-FREE RepleniSH, Alcon) on cell viability was performed by quantifying cellular ATP content, resazurin reduction, and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release in transformed human corneal epithelial cells (HCEpiC) and primary bovine corneal epithelial cells (BCEpiC).ResultsSignificant reductions in cellular ATP content were observed at 40% solution and above with both MPS B and MPS D, compared to at 100% only for MPS A and MPS C, and similar results were obtained in BCEpiC. Effects on resazurin reduction were also less in HCEpiC exposed to increasing doses of MPS A and MPS C than in cells exposed to MPS B and MPS D. After 15 min, HCEpiC viability measured by both resazurin reduction and cellular ATP levels was significantly lower for cells exposed to MPS B, MPS D, and MPS C, while HCEpiC exposed to MPS A were not affected. MPS B and MPS D reduced cell viability more than MPS A and MPS C over a 2-h time course in both HCEpiC and BCEpiC.ConclusionsBoth MPS B and MPS D can cause large decreases in the viability of cultured corneal epithelial cells even with just a 2 h exposure at multiple doses. Significant reduction in cell viability is evident at brief 15–30 min exposures. In contrast, MPS A and MPS C have significantly less effect on the cell viability of corneal epithelial cells at multiple doses, after these short exposure times.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Ophthalmology
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