已发表论文

温敏原位凝胶局部注射左旋卡尼汀治疗干眼症

 

Authors Ma B, Pang L, Huang P, Bai J, Zhang Z, Wu H, Cai M, Yang J, Xu Y, Yin X, Qu C, Ni J

Received 5 March 2021

Accepted for publication 13 May 2021

Published 2 June 2021 Volume 2021:15 Pages 2357—2373

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/DDDT.S309648

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Dr Jianbo Sun

Purpose: To prepare the levocarnitine thermosensitive in situ gel (LCTG) and evaluate its effect on dry eye disease (DED).
Methods: Draize eye irritation test and other examinations were used to evaluate the eye irritation after multiple administration of LCTG. The Schirmer test, fluorescein sodium staining, HE staining and TUNEL staining were used to detect the tear secretion, corneal injury, histopathological changes of the cornea and lacrimal gland, and the apoptosis rate of cornea epithelial cells after 3 days of the administration. The conjunctival goblet cell density was detected by PAS staining, and the expression levels of matrix metalloproteinase-3 (MMP-3) and matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) of corneal epithelial cells were detected by immunofluorescence staining after 7 days of the administration.
Results: LCTG is non-irritating to rabbit eyes and has good biocompatibility. LCTG administration for 3 days can significantly increase the amount of tear secretion in mice with DED, promote corneal epithelial integrity and central corneal epithelium thickness recovery, and improve the pathological morphology and structure of corneal and lacrimal gland tissues, and reduce the apoptosis rate of the corneal epithelial cells. After 7 days of the administration, the preparation can promote the proliferation of conjunctival goblet cells and down-regulate the cornea expression levels of MMP-3 and MMP-9 in epithelial cells.
Conclusion: The LCTG has a good curative effect on mice with DED, and the overall curative effect is better than that of levocarnitine solution.
Keywords: levocarnitine, cornea, in situ gel, delivery, dry eye disease