TY - JOUR AU - Edelhauser, Henry F. AB - ObjectiveTo evaluate human corneas after laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis at different postoperative intervals.MethodsThirty-eight postmortem corneas from 20 patients with postoperative intervals from 2 months to 6.5 years after laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis surgery were collected from eye banks. The corneas were trisected and processed for conventional histologic analysis, transmission electron microscopy, and immunofluorescence.ResultsLight microscopy and transmission electron microscopy showed focal undulations in Bowman layer, focal epithelial hypertrophic modifications, and a variably thick (range, 0.4-16.4-μm) lamellar stromal interface scar in all specimens. The flap wound margin, which was adjacent to the epithelium, healed by producing an approximately 8-μm-thick hypercellular fibrotic stromal scar, whereas the central and paracentral wound regions healed differently because a thinner (approximately 5-μm) hypocellular primitive stromal scar was present in all the corneas examined. Immunofluorescence identified increased type 3 collagen and myofibroblasts in the hypercellular fibrotic scar regions and decreased or absent levels of all corneal stromal components other than type 1 collagen in the hypocellular primitive scar regions.ConclusionsAfter laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis surgery, the keratocyte-mediated production of a variably thick lamellar corneal stromal scar occurs, resulting in 2 regional types of scarring. The hypercellular fibrotic scar at the wound margin is usually visible clinically and functions to hold the flap in place, while the more central hypocellular primitive scar is not visible clinically and allows easy lifting of the flap postoperatively.Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) was the first type of refractive surgical technique to use an excimer laser for the correction of myopia.A different technique that uses a modification of Barraquer keratomileusis, laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis (LASIK), was developed in 1990 by Pallikaris et al.It involves using a mechanical or laser microkeratome to create a hinged corneal flap that is 120 to 180 μm thick and 8 to 10 mm in diameter. The flap is lifted and folded back from the underlying corneal stromal bed that is ablated and recontoured with submicrometer accuracy using an excimer laser. The flap re-covers the corneal bed and adheres without sutures. Although neither of these 2 laser techniques has been proven superior with regard to final visual outcome, LASIK provides certain advantages compared with PRK: no significant central corneal haze, less myopic regression, faster visual recovery, and less postoperative discomfort.Because of these advantages, LASIK is currently the most frequently performed refractive surgical procedure in the United States and the world.Most publications that evaluate the results of LASIK discuss clinical outcomes with little emphasis on the wound healing process. Moreover, when attention to the biology of the wound healing process is addressed, it usually consists of clinical confocal microscopy evaluationsor animal corneal wound healing histopathologic studies.With regard to the latter, one must realize that the architecture and biological properties of animal corneas can be quite different from those of humans. Of the few human corneal wound healing histopathologic studies, most consist of case reports or small case series from blind eyes that had undergone LASIK prior to enucleation,from corneal buttons collected after penetrating keratoplasty was performed for post-LASIK complications,or from organ-cultured human corneas that had undergone LASIK.One recent study evaluated 26 human donor corneas with previous uncomplicated LASIK using slitlamp, specular, and light microscopy.We examined a total of 92 postmortem eye-bank corneas from 48 patients who had LASIK and died for unrelated reasons. We previously described the histopathologic analysis and ultrastructure from 4 corneas of 2 patientsand have submitted another publication that surveys the entire LASIK cornea to describe the prevalence and spectrum of pathologic findings found in 48 corneas from 25 patients.In the present study, 38 additional corneas of 20 patients were evaluated to describe in detail the changes that occur in the cellular and extracellular wound healing components of the lamellar stromal LASIK wound interface. We correlate these findings with the ages of the wounds and suggest how they might affect the clinical appearance and function of the human cornea after surgery.METHODSAfter getting approval from the Emory University institutional review board, we obtained 38 postmortem corneoscleral buttons from 20 patients with a history of LASIK surgery from various eye banks in North America. The specimens were received in Optisol-GS solution (Chiron Ophthalmics, Irvine, Calif) within 6 days of death (mean ± SD time of preservation, 3.53 ± 1.54 days). Review of preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative clinical examinations was performed when available. Four postmortem normal corneas stored in Optisol-GS from 2 patients (mean time of preservation, 39 hours) and 2 postmortem normal corneas from 1 patient stored in moist chambers (mean time of preservation, 21 hours) were obtained from the Georgia Eye Bank (Atlanta) as controls.TISSUEImmediately after receiving the specimens, we evaluated the corneoscleral buttons for gross abnormalities with a dissecting microscope using direct transillumination and retroillumination techniques. The buttons were then oriented with the hinge superiorly and were trisected (Figure 1). The central portion was placed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde for transmission electron microscopic (TEM) processing. The left portion was placed in 10% neutral buffered formalin for conventional histologic processing. The right portion was frozen in optimal cutting temperature compound (Tissue-Tek-II; Miles Inc, Elkhart, Ind) for immunofluorescent histologic processing.Figure 1.A, Corneal diagram showing how the corneoscleral buttons were trisected and processed. The white area indicates the cornea; gray area, sclera; semicircle of dashes, laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis flap. Gross photographs viewed with a dissecting microscope using direct (B) and retroillumination techniques (C) of the typical corneoscleral button showing a hazy semicircular ring at the flap margin (arrowheads) and a clear central flap area (magnification ×2 in B and ×3 in C). The concentric circular wrinkles in (C) are a transient artifact induced on the anterior cornea by the weight of the corneoscleral button.CONVENTIONAL HISTOLOGIC PROCESSINGThe formalin-fixed specimens were processed by dehydration with a graded series of alcohol solutions, cleared with xylene solution, infiltrated with paraffin, and embedded into a paraffin block for sectioning. Four-micrometer-thick sections were then cut and stained with hematoxylin-eosin or periodic acid–Schiff according to routine protocols. Histopathologic findings from light microscopic examination were recorded, including endothelial cell density (determined by counting and averaging the number of endothelial cell nuclei in 5 high-power fields [HPFs; ×400] and converting to cell density using a previously derived nomogram), epithelial thickness (taken from a representative area that had the least amount of artifacts and contained all 3 distinct types of epithelial cells: basal, wing, and superficial epithelial cells), flap thickness, and residual stromal bed thickness measurements using a calibrated ocular reticule and an Olympus BH-2 microscope (Olympus Ltd, Tokyo, Japan). A 30-μm-wide HPF column was used to quantitatively count the number of keratocytes at the following 8 positions of the cornea (Figure 2A): (1) peripheral lamellar wound at the flap margin, (2) central lamellar wound, (3) posterior aspect of the flap centered at a depth of 100 μm from the anterior surface of the Bowman layer or 30 μm in front of this position if the 100-μm-deep column included the LASIK scar, (4) anterior aspect of the flap centered at 15 μm below the posterior surface of the Bowman layer, and (5-8) the corresponding 4 internal control positions at least 100 μm away from the lamellar scar.Figure 2.A, Corneal diagram with rectangular boxes in 8 positions denoting the location and approximate sizes of the area assessed for quantitative keratocytes counts. B–D, Graphs of the mean keratocyte counts plotted chronologically comparing areas in the surgical field with internal normal control values. Asterisk indicates values that are clinically significant (P<.05); AAOF, anterior aspect of the flap; CS, central scar; HPF, high-power field; LASIK, laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis; PAOF, posterior aspect of the flap; and PS, peripheral scar.ULTRASTRUCTURAL EVALUATIONThe glutaraldehyde-fixed specimens were rinsed in cacodylate buffer and postfixed in 1% osmium tetroxide for 1 to 2 hours at room temperature. The tissue was then dehydrated and embedded in LX 112 epoxy resin according to standard techniques. Thick sections (1.5 μm) were then stained with toluidine blue and evaluated by light microscopy to find the lamellar LASIK wound. The blocks were trimmed around areas of interest and thin sections (70-80 nm) were cut, placed in a copper grid, double-stained with uranyl acetate–lead citrate, and examined with a JEM-100 CXII TEM (JEOL Ltd, Tokyo) at magnifications ranging from ×4750 to ×90 000. Additionally, 3 corneas were stained with a 2.5% glutaraldehyde solution containing 0.5% cupromeronic blue in 25mM sodium acetate buffer, pH 5.6, containing a critical electrolyte concentration of 0.1M magnesium chloride, according to published techniques,prior to routine TEM processing as described earlier to specifically identify and evaluate proteoglycan ultrastructure. After reviewing the TEM results, we recorded ultrastructural findings, including detailed descriptions and measurements (using an ultrastructure calculator) of the lamellar LASIK wound, with particular emphasis on the extracellular and cellular structures present in the wound.IMMUNOFLUORESCENCEThe frozen specimens were cut into 5-μm sections using a cryostat at −20°C and mounted on coated glass slides that were dried overnight at 37°C. The sections were then fixed in acetone at 4°C for 20 minutes prior to immunoflurorescence studies using a double-staining, indirect immunofluorescent method that evaluated 2 different antigens per section.Briefly, the slides were immersed in 5% normal goat serum (for monoclonal antibody studies) or 5% normal horse serum (for polyclonal antibody studies) to block nonspecific background binding, incubated with a selected primary monoclonal or polyclonal antibody (Table 1), rinsed with phosphate-buffered saline solution, and incubated with the appropriate fluorescein isothiocyanate conjugated secondary antibody for 1 hour at room temperature. Subsequently, the specimens were rinsed in phosphate-buffered saline solution, incubated with a second selected primary antibody for 2.5 hours at room temperature, and further processed in a similar fashion to steps described earlier for the first primary antibody with the exception of using a rhodamine-conjugated secondary antibody. Finally, the slides were rinsed in phosphate-buffered saline solution, incubated with a cupric sulfate and ammonium acetate solution for 20 minutes at room temperature, and rinsed with distilled water prior to mounting for evaluation with the MRC-1024 laser confocal microscope (Bio-Rad Microscience Ltd, Hemel Hempstead, UK). Normal autopsy skin specimens or internal normal corneal stroma served as positive controls while slides processed by omitting the primary antibody steps served as negative controls.Table 1. Primary Antibodies Used for Immunofluorescence EvaluationsAntibody and SpecificitySourceCompanyTitrated Concentration RatioAntihuman collagen type 1 polyclonal AbRabbitChemicon, Inc, Temecula, Calif1 in 40Antihuman collagen type 3 polyclonal AbGoatChemicon, Inc1 in 10Antihuman collagen type 5 polyclonal AbGoatChemicon, Inc1 in 20Antihuman collagen type 6 polyclonal AbGoatChemicon, Inc1 in 40Antihuman keratan sulfate monoclonal AbMouseChemicon, Inc1 in 1000Antihuman dermatan sulfate monoclonal AbMouseUnited States Biological, Swampset, Mass1 in 2000Antihuman α smooth muscle actin monoclonal AbMouseDAKO, Carpinteria, Calif1 in 50 Abbreviation: Ab, antibody.STATISTICAL ANALYSISAll quantitative results were presented as mean ± SD. When internal control measurements were obtained, we performed statistical analysis comparing the surgical areas measured with the internal controls using paired ttests. The level of significance was P≤.05.RESULTSCLINICAL DATAWe could not get the complete histories of the patients who had undergone LASIK for the majority of the specimens because of limitations such as Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act regulations and insufficient medical examiner histories. Clinical data that were available for every specimen included the patient’s age, sex, cause of death, a history of having had uncomplicated myopic LASIK, and the postoperative interval since LASIK. The 20 patients (12 men, 8 women) ranged in age from 29 to 70 years (mean ± SD, 46.9 ± 10.2 years). The postoperative interval after LASIK ranged from 2 months to 6.5 years.GROSS EXAMINATIONGross examination of the corneoscleral buttons revealed a semicircular ring of haze along the wound margin of LASIK flaps in 34 of 38 corneas (Figure 1B and C). In all 4 corneas where a ring of haze was not present, the peripheral LASIK incision could be identified using retroillumination techniques, but it was very subtle to detect.LIGHT MICROSCOPYConventional histologic and toluidine blue–stained light microscopy evaluations revealed a 2- to 8-μm-thick lamellar interface scar in all the specimens (Figure 3). Qualitatively, the scar was easily identified in all specimens up to 3 years postoperatively; it became more difficult to detect by light microscopy thereafter, especially on toluidine blue–stained sections. It was most easily identified in periodic acid-Schiff–stained sections because the scar stained more intensely than surrounding normal corneal stroma in all specimens. The scar also appeared more cellular at the wound margin and less cellular in the paracentral and central portions compared with that of normal adjacent corneal stroma (Figure 4A and B). At the wound margin, some corneas showed inward basal epithelial cell elongation filling gaps in the Bowman layer (Figure 5A), variable amounts of epithelial ingrowth into the lamellar wound (Figure 5), microscopic foci or islands of epithelial actually in the scar (Figure 5D), and variability in the alignment of the cut end of Bowman layer at the wound margin (eg, good alignment with a small gap at the break [Figure 6C], depressed or elevated ends [Figure 4A and Figure 5A], curled inward ends [Figure 5D], or good alignment with a wide gap at the break [Figure 6A]). Mild epithelial hyperplasia was commonly present over the wound margin (Figure 7A-C). Although the epithelial hyperplasia was never found over the paracentral or central flap surface, there were focal areas of basal epithelial cell hypertrophic elongation causing mild thickening of the corneal epithelium. The basal epithelial cell elongation was most pronounced in valleys produced by undulations of the underlying Bowman layer as if the cells were stretching inward to fill in the depression, without altering the surface contour. These undulations in the Bowman layer were present in random focal areas over the flap in all corneas examined and are consistent with the clinical term of microstriae (Figure 7D). In the paracentral and central portions of the scar in 1 patient who had LASIK 2 months before dying, both corneas had small extracellular vacuoles in the lamellar scar that did not stain with periodic acid–Schiff, Alcian blue, or colloidal iron.Figure 3.Histopathology of a 6-month-old (A and B) and a 2-month-old (C) laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis corneal wound. The arrows indicate the lamellar wound. The stains and magnifications are hematoxylin-eosin, original magnification ×25; periodic acid–Schiff, original magnification ×25; and toluidine blue, original magnification ×25 for A, B, and C, respectively.Figure 4.Histopathology of a 2-month-old laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis corneal wound (arrows) at the peripheral wound region (A) and at a more central, deeper region (B). A, Notice the thicker, hypercellular wound margin scar type (between the left arrowheads) compared with the thinner, hypocellular scar type present in the remaining aspects of the wound (between the right arrowheads and between all of the arrowheads in B). The epithelium in this cornea has severe artifactual changes (toluidine blue, original magnification ×100).Figure 5.Histopathology of the peripheral wound region of 4 laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis corneas displaying varying degrees of epithelial ingrowth. A and B represent the more common appearances of the flap margin, while C and D are uncommon but informative appearances of the flap margin. A, Hypertrophy of basal epithelial cells producing an elongated cell type to fill the divot at the flap margin. B, Microscopic, presumably clinically inconspicuous, epithelial ingrowth. C, Large, presumably clinically apparent, epithelial ingrowth. D, An island of epithelial ingrowth. B and D have severe artifactual epithelial changes (toluidine blue, original magnification ×100).Figure 6.Ultrastructure of a 4-month-old laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) corneal wound using low magnification (original magnification ×4750) (A) and moderate magnification (original magnification ×35 000) (B) of the typical LASIK wound margin. A, Notice that the initial 42-μm length of the 5.1-μm-thick (between arrowheads) scar (arrow) is hypercellular. B, The extracellular matrix of this scar is consistent with fibrosis because it predominantly is composed of a dense network of mildly disorganized collagen fibrils (arrows) with few patches of electron-dense granular material (arrowheads). Wound margin variants that had clinically transparent flap margins are shown in C and D. C, A well-aligned wound margin with minimal separation of the Bowman layer and minimal fibrotic scar tissue in the small 1.1-μm wound gap (original magnification ×4750). D, Epithelial ingrowth (arrowhead) of 80 μm in length is present in the wound margin with a small 5-μm surrounding zone of hypercellular fibrosis and an adjacent hypocellular primitive scar immediately beneath it (arrow) (original magnification ×4750). Bar indicates 1 μm.Figure 7.A, Histopathology of a 6-month-old laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis corneal wound (arrows) showing representative corneal epithelium with normal morphology and minimal artifactual changes over the limbus (L), peripheral cornea (P), and central cornea (C), but that the over-the-flap margin (M) is thicker and hyperplastic (hematoxylin-eosin, original magnification ×10). B, Higher-power view (original magnification ×100) of the marginal (M) epithelium, which measured 50 μm thick and contained 8 cell layers. C, Higher-power view (original magnification ×100) of the central (C) epithelium, which measured 30 μm thick and contained 6 cell layers. D, The central epithelium did show focal areas of thickening from inward epithelial cell elongation in valleys of microstriae. Arrows indicate Bowman layer undulations or microstriae; arrowhead, basal epithelial cell elongation (toluidine blue, original magnification ×100).Quantitative light microscopy results are summarized in Table 2. Epithelial cell measurements were taken in 3 locations (Figure 7B): peripheral to the flap, over the flap margin (Figure 7C), and on the central flap surface (Figure 7C). The central thickness of the LASIK flap averaged 160 ± 23 μm, the residual stromal bed thickness averaged 399 ± 54 μm, and the endothelial cell density averaged 2307 ± 974 cells/mm2. Epithelial ingrowth into the flap margin was found in 20 (53%) of the 38 corneas examined using step sections. The length of epithelial ingrowth averaged 291 ± 209 μm (range, 30-900 μm). Keratocyte cell counts per HPF obtained from 4 locations along the lamellar scar or in the flap were each statistically compared with 4 normal internal control values outside the surgical field (Figure 2A). These results showed that a statistically significant (P≤.05) increase of keratocytes (Table 2) occurred at the LASIK wound margin regardless of time from LASIK to death (P≤.02) (Figure 2B), but no statistical difference was found along the central stromal wound (P≥.13) compared with controls (Figure 2C). Keratocyte cell counts per HPF taken in the LASIK flap showed a statistically significant reduction (Table 2) at the anterior aspect of the flap compared with controls up to 6 months postoperatively (P≤.07), and no statistical difference was found after 6 months in this region (P≥.19). At all postoperative times, the posterior aspect of the flap had similar keratocyte densities (P≥.28) as controls (Figure 2D).Table 2. Quantitative Light Microscopy Results*Pathologic FindingThickness, Mean ± SDRange of ThicknessNo. of Cell Layers, Mean ± SDRange of Cell Layers, No.Peripheral epithelial thickness33 ± 624-445.0 ± 0.94-7Marginal epithelial thickness43 ± 926-645.8 ± 1.44-9Central epithelial thickness29 ± 720-444.9 ± 0.94-6Flap thickness160 ± 23110-216NANAResidual stromal bed thickness399 ± 54290-460NANAEndothelial cell density2307 ± 974 cells/mm21828-2843 cells/mm2NANAEpithelial ingrowth291 ± 20930-900NANA Abbreviation: NA, not applicable. *Values are in micrometers unless otherwise indicated.ULTRASTRUCTURAL EVALUATIONLow-magnification (×4750) TEM results of the central (Figure 8A) and the paracentral lamellar wound (Figure 8B) showed a variably thick, hypocellular primitive stromal scar present in all corneas with a mean cross-sectional thickness of 4.5 ± 3.1 μm (range, 0.4-11.4 μm). In LASIK wounds less than or equal to 6 months old, the keratocytes in or next to this scar predominantly had the morphological appearance of activated keratocytes (ie, prominent mitochondria, prominent Golgi apparatus, and extensive dilated endoplasmic reticulum). The proportion of keratocytes appearing activated and the extent of activation gradually diminished over time from 2 to 6 months after surgery. In all corneal wounds older than 6 months, only quiescent keratocytes with occasional small (0.25-2 μm in diameter), clear intracytoplasmic vacuoles were present. High-magnification (×72 500) TEM results showed that the extracellular matrix of the hypocellular scar was predominantly composed of an electron-dense granular material (Figure 8C) with only small amounts of loosely interspersed collagen fibrils slightly decreased in diameter (mean ± SD, 21.1 ± 0.8 nm) from normal (mean ± SD, 25.9 ± 1.4 nm). These interspersed collagen fibrils were randomly directed and severely and variably spatially disordered (Figure 8D) compared with normal corneal stroma. Transmission electron microscopy results from cupromeronic blue–stained tissue showed that the composition of this electron-dense granular material was a mixture primarily composed of abnormally large, non–fibril-bound proteoglycans (average size, 360 nm × 20 nm) with small, interspersed amounts of normal-size, fibril-bound proteoglycans (average size, 40-65 nm × 6 nm) and collagen microfibrils or molecules (Figure 9A and B).Figure 8.Ultrastructure of a 6-month-old laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis corneal wound (arrows) using low-magnification transmission electron microscopy (original magnification ×4750) at the central scar region (A) and the paracentral scar region (B). A, Notice the variation in thickness of the central scar (5.8 μm thick between arrowheads at the left and 1.1 μm thick between arrowheads at the right). B, The paracentral scar is more uniform in thickness (5.5 μm thick between arrowheads at the left and 7.0 μm thick between arrowheads at the right). Higher-magnification views (×72 500) in the central scar showing that it is primarily composed of electron-dense granular material (arrows) are shown in C and D. C, The electron-dense granular material (arrow) appears to be produced by activated keratocytes (arrowhead) because it is most densely concentrated around these cell types and a few vacuoles inside these cells contain similar material. D, Notice the severe disorganization and the small amount of collagen fibrils (arrowheads) in this wound type. Bar indicates 1 μm.Figure 9.Ultrastructure using cupromeronic blue–stained tangential transmission electron microscopy (TEM) views of the interface scar (A) and 10 μm deeper into the residual stromal bed (B) of a 27-month-old laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis corneal wound. A, Notice the predominance of abnormally large, non–fibril-bound proteoglycans in the interface scar (arrows). B, The residual stromal bed shows a predominance of normal-size, fibril-bound proteoglycans (arrowheads) and fewer abnormally large proteoglycans (arrows). Bar indicates 1 μm (cupromeronic blue–stained TEM, original magnification ×90 000).At the wound margin, up to 75 μm of the initial length of the wound adjacent to the epithelium healed by producing a hypercellular fibrotic stromal scar (Figure 6A and B). Interestingly, there were smaller areas of this scar type if the Bowman layer break was almost perfectly aligned (Figure 6C) or if epithelial ingrowth extended into the wound (Figure 6D). In low-magnification (×4750) TEM results, the typical LASIK flap wound margin showed a variably thick hypercellular fibrotic scar (Figure 6A) with a mean cross-sectional thickness of 7.8 ± 4.1 μm (range, 1.1-16.4 μm). In LASIK wounds less than or equal to 6 months old, the keratocytes in or next to this scar predominantly had the morphological appearance of activated keratocytes. Although the proportion of keratocytes appearing activated and the extent of activation gradually diminished over time from 2 to 6 months after surgery (similar to the central hypocellular scar type), the density and extent of keratocyte differentiation was greater in the hypercellular wound margin scar compared with the hypocellular primitive scar. In all corneal wounds older than 6 months, only quiescent keratocytes were apparent. High-magnification (×72 500) TEM results showed that the extracellular matrix of this scar type primarily was composed of a dense network of normal diameter collagen fibrils (mean ± SD, 26.6 ± 3.0 nm) with minimal interspersed patches of electron-dense granular material. The collagen fibrils of this scar type were mildly spatially disordered and randomly directed compared with normal corneal stroma (Figure 6B).Ultrastructural evaluation also demonstrated in some cases empty spaces filled with foreign material suspicious for plastic particlesin the peripheral scar (Figure 10A), occasional foci of microscopic (ie, 1-2 cells) epithelial cell implantation in the scar, extracellular spaces filled with lightly electron-dense fibrillar material in the scar (Figure 10B), occasional vacuolated cells containing fibrillar material next to the scar (Figure 10C), and foci of wide-spaced 110-nm banded collagen interspersed near the scar (Figure 10D). These last 3 findings were most prominent in the 2-month-old LASIK corneal wounds and were rarely found in wounds older than 6 months.Figure 10.Ultrastructure of a 2-month-old laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) corneal wound using low magnification (original magnification ×4750) showing extracellular particles in the interface—suspicious for plastic material (arrows) (A), empty spaces containing fibrillar material (arrows) in the interface—presumably fragments of damaged collagen lamellae (B), and fibrillar material-laden cells (arrows) next to the interface—presumably histocytes phagocytizing damaged collagen fragments (D). Insets show moderate magnification (original magnification ×35 000) of the same case showing wide-spaced banded collagen (arrows) surrounding the interface—presumably abnormal collagen produced by stressed keratocytes (ie, keratocytes that died by apoptosis immediately after LASIK). Bar indicates 1 μm.IMMUNOFLUORESCENCEImmunofluorescent staining showed that collagen type 1 (Figure 11A) was present throughout the entire (ie, margin, paracentral, and central) lamellar scar at similar intensity levels compared with normal corneal stroma. Collagen type 6 and keratan sulfate were found in the wound margin at similar intensity levels to normal corneal stroma and slightly less than normal levels at the paracentral and central scar regions. Collagen type 5 was found in the wound margin at similar intensity levels to normal corneal stroma but was markedly reduced compared with normal levels at the paracentral and central scar regions. Collagen type 3 (Figure 11B) was present in the wound margin scar at higher-intensity levels than normal, and dermatan sulfate was present at the wound margin scar at similar intensity levels to normal corneal stroma, while both were absent in the paracentral and central scar regions. Used as a marker for myofibroblast differentiation, α smooth muscle actin was found only in keratocytes at the wound margin scar. It was most prominent in zones up to 75 μm in length in LASIK wounds 2 to 4 months old (Figure 11C) but continued to be found in occasional keratocytes directly under the epithelial wound margin surface, even in corneas up to 6 years after surgery, particularly in wounds with a large gap in the Bowman layer (Figure 11D).Figure 11.Immunofluorescence of a 5-year-old laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) corneal wound (arrows) showing type 1 collagen throughout the entire interface scar (A) and increased type 3 collagen at the wound margin only (B). Using the primary antibody for α smooth muscle actin, myofibroblasts were found in a 75-μm zone in the wound margin scar in a 4-month-old LASIK wound (C) and in the first cell layer below the epithelial surface in a 3-year-old LASIK wound (D) (original magnification ×100).COMMENTCorneal wound healing using full-thickness,partial thickness,and superficial keratectomy woundshas been studied extensively in animal models and humans, especially in correlation to corneal transplantation, cataract extraction, radial keratotomy, and PRK. Those studies all showed that the cornea heals through a series of well-defined stages and steps: active wound healing (initial corneal injury; proliferation and migration of surviving corneal epithelial cells, stromal keratocytes, and endothelial cells; cellular differentiation with active removal, synthesis, and deposition of extracellular material) and tissue remodeling. Corneal function (ie, transparency and wound strength) usually returns to maximal levels, but not always normal levels, after completion of the remodeling stage.Most of the cellular and extracellular details of LASIK wounds during the active wound-healing stage have been accurately addressed through animal histologic studies.Those studies have shown that LASIK-induced corneal stromal injury results in keratocyte apoptosis in a zone approximately 50 μm anterior and 50 μm posterior to the central and paracentral lamellar incision over the first 24 hours after injury.Animal studies have also shown that epithelial-stromal interactions significantly augment the initial wound response cascadeonly at the wound margin while the entire LASIK wound enters the phases of keratocyte proliferation (which starts by 4 hours after injury and ends by 1 week after injury), minor continued keratocyte apoptosis and minor keratocyte necrosis (24 hours to 1 week), inflammatory cell infiltration (4 hours to 1 week), keratocyte cell migration (3 days to 3 weeks), and keratocyte differentiation (1-6 weeks in the central flap and 1 week to 3 months or longer at the flap margin).Keratocyte differentiation is important for corneal transparency because the transient appearance or chronic persistence of altered keratocytes correlates with the clinical appearance of corneal haze after corneal refractive surgery.Additionally, although postrefractive surgery corneas may appear transparent clinically, the subclinical presence of these altered keratocytes can potentially affect certain aspects of visual function, such as a reduction in low-frequency contrast sensitivity; glare-induced dysfunction; and, in some cases, reduction of best spectacle–corrected visual acuity.Animal studies using in vivo confocal microscopy and immunohistologic evaluation suggest that 3 morphologically and functionally distinct types of wound response keratocytes can develop from the normal quiescent undamaged keratocyte population after corneal stromal injury: the migratory keratocyte (mobilizes and repopulates the acellular wound zones), the activated keratocyte (synthesizes; deposits and degrades extracellular matrix), and the myofibroblast (initiates wound contracture).Because most human LASIK studies evaluate active wound healing through clinical measures such as refraction, slitlamp examination, videokeratography, ultrasound pachymetry, and in vivo confocal microscopy, they add to the animal histopathologic studies either by supporting their findings or by specifying the times of events in humans as opposed to animals. One particular study used ultrasound pachymetry in correlation to refraction and keratometry data to address the time of active wound healing.That study showed that new tissue is synthesized and deposited as early as 1 week after injury and continues to deposit in significant enough amounts to gradually increase mean central corneal thickness values up to 6 months postoperatively, with most corneas stabilizing between 3 and 6 months after surgery. Another study that evaluated full-thickness corneal wounds found that the remodeling stage occurs up to 4 years after surgery.Overall, these human studies are important because they imply that active corneal stromal wound healing should be completed by 6 months after LASIK, followed by a remodeling stage that may last up to 4 years.Our study of postoperative (2 months to 6.5 years) human LASIK corneal wounds found the production of a stromal interface scar of variable thickness during the time of active corneal wound healing and an epithelium displaying focal outward compensatory epithelial hyperplasia only at the flap margin. Furthermore, our quantitative epithelial measurements did find evidence of a slight increase in the average thickness of central corneal epithelium of 1.3 to 3.2 μm compared with our normal control corneas. This epithelial thickening over the flap surface was identified as focal areas of inward basal epithelial cell hypertrophic elongation, most prominently seen filling in valleys produced by underlying microstriae (Figure 7D). This inward epithelial hypertrophy represents a milder compensatory mechanism of epithelial thickening than that of outward compensatory epithelial hyperplasia that usually is seen in cases with more abrupt contour changes or more excavated areas of stromal loss (eg, the LASIK wound margin). The cause for the epithelial thickening over the center of the flap after LASIK is important because it previously was suspected by several clinical LASIK studies to cause the regression of initial refractive effect.Those previous longitudinal studies showed a mean epithelial thickening of 6 to 8 μm over the center of the flap after LASIK, predominantly developing 1 week to 1 month after surgery. It was speculated from those studies that this epithelial thickening represented outward compensatory epithelial hyperplasia, which presumably resulted in a steepening of the curvature on the anterior corneal surface with resulting myopic regression.Although never addressed in those studies, it is possible that a large portion of the change in epithelial thickness in the previous clinical studies resulted from discontinuing chronic contact lens wear rather than the LASIK surgery itself. It has been reported previously that the epithelium thickens on average 6 μm over the first 33 days after extended-wear soft contact lens removal, likely caused by hypoxia relief.On the other hand, because our study is not longitudinal and tissue artifacts may have been introduced from storage and histologic processing (particularly the epithelial cell shrinkage induced by Optisol-GS storage), perhaps our post-LASIK central epithelial thickening results should be greater. Despite these possibilities, our study definitely found no evidence of outward epithelial hyperplasia over the surface of the flap except at the wound margin and only minor focal areas of epithelial thickening over the center of the flap from inward basal epithelial cell elongation.In the stromal wound, after the LASIK flap wound is created by the microkeratome (mechanical or laser), we found that there are 2 distinct types and regions of wound healing: a fibrotic reparative stromal wound healing occurring at the wound margin and a primitive reparative stromal wound healing in the remainder of the wound. The edge of the LASIK flap healed according to classic corneal stroma wound healing because a variably thick (mean ± SD thickness, 7.8 ± 4.1 μm) hypercellular fibrotic scar was produced.Our quantitative keratocyte measurements confirmed that a permanent but gradually diminishing statistically significant increase in keratocytes occurred in the wound margin scar compared with normal (Figure 2B). Additionally, the transient (ie, ≤6 months after surgery) and persistent alterations found in the keratocytes populating this scar type, the transient activation of large numbers of keratocytes, and the occasional persistent myofibroblasts were only present in this region of the wound. This presumably occurs because epithelial-stromal interactions (ie, chemotactic cytokines and growth factors from epithelial cells, keratocytes, and tears) only take place in this region of the wound, where the 2 tissues are in apposition. The extracellular matrix of this scar type was described as fibrotic because it was predominantly composed of a dense network of normal diameter (approximately 26 nm) collagen fibrils. Based on our immunofluorescence results, this scar contained more collagen type 3 compared with that normally present in the corneal stroma while possessing similar levels of collagen types 1, 5, and 6; dermatan sulfate; and keratan sulfate.By comparison, the paracentral and central portions of the wound that have no epithelial cell influences healed similarly to early nonspecific corneal stroma wound healing steps that partially recapitulate events of a developing fetal cornea. Our quantitative keratocyte measurements confirmed that this scar type was hypocellular, but using a 30-μm-wide HPF column did not show a statistically significant decrease in keratocytes compared with normal (Figure 2C), probably because this scar type was much thinner than the measuring width of the HPF column. Only transient wound response keratocytes (ie, migratory and activated keratocytes) were found in this sparsely keratocyte-populated scar type. The extracellular matrix of this scar type is described as primitive because it primarily is composed of electron-dense granular material with only loosely scattered, smaller-than-normal-diameter collagen fibrils (approximately 21 nm). When our ultrastructural evaluations were arranged chronologically by the age of the wound, an increase in the amount and cross-sectional thickness of the electron-dense granular material was apparent in the hypocellular scar regions from 2 to 6 months old; otherwise, no other qualitative trends were apparent. This electron-dense granular material was found to be a mixture predominantly composed of abnormally large, highly sulfated, non–fibril-bound proteoglycans with small, interspersed amounts of both normal-size, fibril-bound proteoglycans and collagen microfibrils and molecules. Based on our immunofluorescence results, this scar contained similar amounts of collagen type 1, slightly decreased amounts of collagen type 6 and keratan sulfate, markedly decreased amounts of collagen type 5, and no detectable amounts of collagen type 3 and dermatan sulfate compared with those of normal corneal stroma.Previous studies using cuprolinic blue staining in rabbit corneas with full-thickness wounds,superficial mechanical keratectomy wounds,superficial laser keratectomy wounds,and mechanical lamellar incisionshave also shown the production of nonspecific, abnormally large sulfated proteoglycans during early stromal wound healing; however, in those studies the abnormal proteoglycans decreased in size and density as rabbit corneal wounds aged before disappearing altogether by 1 year after the injury. We did not detect a similar decrease in the size, density, or disappearance of these abnormal proteoglycans in adult human corneal wounds that developed a hypocellular primitive stromal scar, but it should be emphasized that our study was limited to only 3 cupromeronic blue evaluations (6-month-old, 27-month-old, and 5-year-old corneal wounds). Two rabbit studies also have demonstrated that the majority of the abnormally large proteoglycans were susceptible to digestion with chondroitinase ABC indicating that they most likely are a type of dermatan sulfate proteoglycan.Although this was confirmed in a rabbit study using chromatography techniques,2 other chromatography studies in rabbits also discovered that abnormally large keratan sulfate proteoglycans are present in corneal stromal wounds as well but in reduced amounts compared with the normal corneal stroma.Interestingly, these 2 abnormally large proteoglycans were found to be altered in molecular form from normal as the dermatan sulfate contained a 2-fold increase in iduronic acid content and was more highly sulfated than normal while the keratan sulfate was undersulfated compared with normal.This alteration of form may explain why our primary antibody for normal corneal dermatan sulfate failed to stain the hypocellular primitive scar. Overall, all of the proteoglycan alterations previously discussed and the reduced collagen fibril formation in the hypocellular primitive stromal scar may increase the water-absorbing and swelling capabilities of the cornea wound. This would then explain the preferential localization of corneal edema to the LASIK interface region in patients with endothelial cell dysfunctionor high intraocular pressure.Postoperative regression of the initial LASIK refractive effect has been studied using keratometric, refractive, and pachymetric measurements at specific times up to 1 year after surgery on highly myopic eyes with a mean preoperative manifest spherical equivalent refraction of −14.02 ± 5.3 diopter (D).That study found that the central cornea gradually increased in thickness for a mean value of 15 μm over the first 6 months postoperatively before stabilization; this resulted in a total mean −0.96-D shift in refraction and a +1.03-D increase in central corneal power.Additionally, clinical refractive surgery studies using larger (6-mm optical zone or greater), smoother, more uniform ablation profiles that presumably produce no or very little compensatory epithelial hyperplasiasuggest that the biological regression capabilities of adult human corneal stroma corrects about 4% to 10% of the initial refractive effect after LASIKwhile 10% to 17% occurs after PRK.Our study demonstrated that central LASIK wounds heal by producing a variably thick stromal scar with a mean ± SD central thickness of 4.5 ± 3.1 μm and slight epithelial thickening of 1.3 to 3.2 μm from basal epithelial cell hypertrophic elongation in focal areas over the visual axis. Although the maximal thickness change in our corneas of 14.6 μm (11.4 μm [maximum central stromal scar thickness] + 3.2 μm [maximum epithelial thickness increase] = 14.6 μm) correlates well with the mean 15-μm value obtained by the clinical study, our mean thickness change of 6.8 μm (4.5 μm [mean central stromal scar thickness] + 2.3 μm [mean epithelial thickness increase] = 6.8 μm) is considerably less. Such a difference most likely is due to difference in the average amount of planned refractive correction between their highly myopic patient population and our presumably mildly myopic but unknown LASIK population. Additionally, the shrinkage artifact induced by storage and histologic processing and the sampling errors that can occur with ultrasonic pachymetry could partially account for this disparity. Despite these inconsistencies, it does seem clear from our findings that the keratocyte-mediated regrowth of the photoablated stroma is probably the primary reason for the regression of initial refractive effect because it definitely would cause an outward steepening of the central cornea in most cases.Two light-scattering studies addressed the issue of clinical haze development after LASIK and PRK in rabbits. They found no significant difference in light scattering over the central part of the LASIK flap compared with normal rabbit corneas at 6 to 12 weeks after surgery, whereas after PRK, corneas scattered 78% or more light than normal up to 12 weeks postoperatively.The LASIK flap margin heals similarly to PRK wounds and presumably scatters light to a similar degree. After applying the 3 main reasons for normal corneal transparency (collagen fibril latticelike arrangement,cell-related factors,and similar refractive indices of connective tissue components) to our findings in these 2 regions of the wound, we feel that a visually significant change in the extracellular refractive index is not likely to occur because the barriers to normal corneal hydration (ie, epithelium and endothelium) are maintained.Additionally, the disorganization of the latticelike arrangement of collagen fibrils cannot be a major cause for loss of transparency because the scar is too thin to scatter significant amounts of light.Most likely, the persistent gray haze at the flap margin, in contrast to the transparency in the paracentral and the central portions of the LASIK wound, is primarily due to cellular factors, particularly the fact that myofibroblasts persist long-term directly beneath the epithelial surface at the wound margin. A similar conclusion has been reached in rabbit and human studies addressing PRK-induced subepithelial haze using both confocal microscopy and histologic evaluations.Those studies showed that clinically transparent, normal corneas contain quiescent keratocytes with invisible dendritic cytoplasmic processes and cell bodies and low-reflective (ie, back-scattering) nuclei. At 3 to 4 weeks after PRK, the same corneas developed clinically visible subepithelial haze in the ablation zone that confocal microscopy attributed to wound response keratocytes that populate the hypercellular, subepithelial stromal scar.Each keratocyte in the hazy PRK scar was found to scatter higher proportions of light than normal quiescent keratocytes do, and this light scattering occurred over a greater surface area because their nuclei, cell bodies, and dendritic processes now moderately back-scattered light. This led to the conclusion that the wound response keratocytes are the primary source of clinical haze production after PRK, which currently is believed to occur through changes in the balance of water-soluble and water-insoluble cytoplasmic proteins levels (ie, corneal crystallins) or from formation of back-scattering microfilament stress bundles.Wound tissue strength after LASIK can be addressed qualitatively from 2 vantage points. First, because our ultrastructural evaluations showed that the architecture of the hypocellular primitive stromal scar regions lacks collagen fibrils (ie, the insoluble connective tissue component important for resisting tensile stress) but contains more than a sufficient amount of altered proteoglycans (ie, soluble connective tissue component that is important in resisting compressive forces), we suspect that the LASIK scar is biomechanically weak in tensile cohesive strength compared with normal corneal stroma, except at the wound margin where the hypercellular fibrotic scar resides. A previous quantitative human corneal wound strength study using healed, sutured, full-thickness corneal or corneoscleral wounds of different ages found that the tensile wound strength of the scars increased gradually up to 4 years after injury before stabilizing at approximately 64% to that of normal stromal tissue.Although LASIK corneal wounds are unsutured, partial thickness, and oriented obliquely or parallel to the corneal surface, we presume that LASIK wounds probably reach similar wound strengths over the first 4 years after injury. Unfortunately, no quantitative human lamellar corneal wound studies have been published to address this issue, but qualitative observations from our study directly show that LASIK wounds are weaker than normal corneal stroma. We found that LASIK wounds never healed sufficiently to prevent artifactual flap detachments, induced by routine histologic sectioning of tissue, from occurring (34% of our corneas developed partial or complete flap detachments, including many LASIK corneal wounds 4 years old or greater, whereas normal, uninjured corneal tissue rarely artifactually fragmented). We also found evidence for remodeling in LASIK scars at the wound margin (ie, gain in wound strength) because LASIK wounds 3 years old or greater never artifactually detached at the wound margin unless an overlying epithelial defect was present. Furthermore, our qualitative assessment of wound strength parallels the clinical literature, which cites numerous case reports or case series of late traumatic flap dislocations occurring up to 38 months after LASIKand from the success of relifting flaps up to 8 years postoperatively for enhancement procedures after manually debriding the overlying marginal epithelial surface and breaking the fibrotic flap wound margin stromal scar.Because 1 of us (G.O.W.) found that LASIK flaps can be relifted with little difficulty up to 11 years postoperatively, we suspect that it probably will be demonstrated in the future that LASIK flaps can be lifted indefinitely. In fact, when excimer lasers create a specific pattern in the surface of the residual corneal stromal bed, such as the concentric circles that are left behind by a large area dilating diaphragm laser, it is possible to see the pattern many years after initial surgery when the flap is relifted, attesting to the lack of fibrosis in the region of the hypocellular primitive scar.Although the LASIK flap in our studies had no obvious extracellular matrix alterations or changes in the cellularity in the posterior aspect of the flap (Figure 2D), we did find that the anterior aspect of the LASIK flap showed a transient, statistically significant decrease in keratocytes in wounds less than or equal to 6 months old compared with normal; thereafter, the anterior flap remained slightly less cellular than normal but not statistically different (Figure 2D). As this correlates with the time of transient denervation of the flap, we suspect that this reduction in keratocyte density may be due to loss of neuropeptides produced by corneal nerves, such as substance P. Substance P has been found to have synergistic effects with insulin-like growth factor-1 or epidermal growth factor,both of which are produced by epithelial cells and keratocytes and are powerful keratocyte chemotactic factors.Although a decrease in keratocyte density in the anterior aspect of the flap has been previously described,those studies both used in vivo confocal microscopy to measure keratocyte density and did not find statistically significant decreases until 6 months or longer after LASIK. We think that the differences between our histopathologic study (30-μm-thick tissue section) and those confocal microscopy studies (9-μm-thick optical section) probably result from sampling errors that occur when trying to measure such small portions of the tissue that are so highly variable in cellularity.In summary, our human LASIK study demonstrated that active wound healing occurs in the corneal stroma up to 6 months postoperatively, producing either a hypocellular primitive stromal scar or a hypercellular fibrotic stromal scar. The latter scar type presumably occurs when epithelial-stromal interactions augment the normal stromal wound healing steps. Additionally, our ultrastructure evaluations and qualitative wound strength observations suggest that remodeling of LASIK wounds occurs up to 3 years postoperatively only in hypercellular fibrotic stromal scar regions (ie, the flap wound margin). Finally, because permanent histologic and ultrastructural changes were universally found in all our LASIK corneas, we have tried to explain how each common microscopic finding potentially alters corneal functionality (Table 3). The reason why human adult corneal stromal wounds heal incompletely is currently unknown.Based on the frequency and variable degree of DNA damage found in normal adult keratocyte populations,it is possible that adult keratocytes may be too altered at the genetic level to successfully repair the corneal stroma completely using keratocyte injury pathways alone. This reason could additionally help explain why wound-healing responses can occur to such unpredictable degrees, even in the same cornea. It is fascinating that when corneal stromal injury is accompanied by overlying epithelial injury, the superficial corneal stroma near the epithelial cell surface heals by producing a more cellular scar with a more completely assembled extracellular matrix than the rest of the stromal wound. Maybe the ectodermally derived epithelial cells make the growth factors, enzymes, or structural proteins necessary for completing extracellular matrix repair, which is lacking from normal or damaged neural crest–derived keratocytes. Two major deficiencies in this epithelial-stromal pathway appear to be the potential to permanently alter the transparency of wound response keratocytes and the fact that this pathway only occurs over short distances.Table 3. Pathologic-Clinical CorrelationPathologic FindingClinical CorrelationCompensatory outward epithelial hyperplasia at the wound marginSmooths contour of anterior corneal surfaceFocal inward basal epithelial cell hypertrophy over flap surfaceFills in low spots produced by the underlying Bowman layer undulations and Bowman layer breaksMinor or secondary role in regression of refractive effect (early component 1 wk to 1 mo)Postoperatively may increase flap thickness measurementsFocal undulations of the Bowman layer in the flapRepresents how the corneal stroma of the flap adjusts to fill in the gap produced by the missing ablated tissueHypercellular fibrotic wound margin scarHazy gray semicircular ring may be clinically apparent (primarily due to myofibroblasts)Strongest portion of scar (holds flap in place)Major role in regression of refractive effectHypocellular primitive central and paracentral scarClinically invisible scarWeakest portion of scar (allows easy lifting of flap for an indefinite time postoperatively)Moderate role in regression of refractive effectIncreased capacity to absorb water and swellServes as a potential space for cells (eg, white blood cells, epithelial cells, red blood cells) or microbes to collect inTransient denervationTransient decrease in corneal sensation, decrease in tear production, and neurotrophic epitheliopathyTransient decrease in anterior keratocyte densityCorrespondence:Henry F. 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