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From Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida.
PURPOSE. To determine the polarization properties of the central cornea at perpendicular incidence in a normal human population on the assumption that the cornea behaves as a linear retarder.
METHODS. A corneal polarimeter provided a view of the fourth Purkinje image of a yellow (585 nm) light-emitting diode through crossed polarizers and a variable retarder. The Purkinje image was extinguished by adjusting the fast axis and retardance of the retarder to match the slow axis and double-pass retardance of the cornea. Both eyes of 73 normal subjects (49 women, 24 men; ages, 2171 years) were measured. Correlations were expressed as Pearsons r.
RESULTS. In most corneas the slow axis pointed nasally downward, with the peak
of the axis distribution falling between 10° and 20° nasally
downward. Double-pass corneal retardance varied widely (range, 0250
nm); 80% of retardance values were uniformly distributed from 40 to
140 nm. Retardance was moderately correlated with axis
(r
0.5), such that weaker retardance was
associated with axes that were more nasally downward. Corneal
birefringence was well correlated between the two eyes of a subject in
both axis (r = 0.77) and retardance
(r = 0.75).
CONCLUSIONS. The variation of corneal birefringence among individuals is substantial enough to produce large, uncontrolled differences in the polarization state of a measuring beam, differences that can introduce variability in newer technologies for ophthalmic diagnosis. The interocular similarity of corneal birefringence suggests deterministic control of corneal development.
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