Progress in tear microdesiccate analysis by combining various transmitted-light microscope techniques
Author
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Traipe Salas, Felipe
Author
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Traipe Castro, Leonidas
Author
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Salinas Toro, Daniela
Author
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López, Daniela
Author
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Valenzuela, Felipe
Author
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Cartes, Christian
Author
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Toledo Araya, Héctor
Author
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Pérez, Claudio
Author
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López Solís, Remigio
Admission date
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2016-11-23T16:22:19Z
Available date
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2016-11-23T16:22:19Z
Publication date
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2016
Cita de ítem
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Biol Res (2016) 49:28
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1186/s40659-016-0089-0
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/141380
Abstract
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Background: Tear desiccation on a glass surface followed by transmitted-light microscopy has served as diagnostic test for dry eye. Four distinctive morphological domains (zones I, II, III and transition band) have been recently recognized in tear microdesiccates. Physicochemical dissimilarities among those domains hamper comprehensive microscopic examination of tear microdesiccates. Optimal observation conditions of entire tear microdesiccates are now investigated. One-mu l aliquots of tear collected from individual healthy eyes were dried at ambient conditions on microscope slides. Tear microdesiccates were examined by combining low-magnification objective lenses with transmitted-light microscopy (brightfield, phase contrasts Ph1,2,3 and darkfield).
Results: Fern-like structures (zones II and III) were visible with all illumination methods excepting brightfield. Zone I was the microdesiccate domain displaying the most noticeable illumination-dependent variations, namely transparent band delimited by an outer rim (Ph1, Ph2), homogeneous compactly built structure (brightfield) or invisible domain (darkfield, Ph3). Intermediate positions of the condenser (BF/Ph1, Ph1/Ph2) showed a structured roughly cylindrical zone I. The transition band also varied from invisibility (brightfield) to a well-defined domain comprising interwoven filamentous elements (phase contrasts, darkfield).
Conclusions: Imaging of entire tear microdesiccates by transmitted-light microscopy depends upon illumination. A more comprehensive description of tear microdesiccates can be achieved by combining illumination methods.
es_ES
Patrocinador
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Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (CONICYT)-Chile
1151005