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Systematic assessment of microneedle injection into the mouse cornea

BACKGROUND: Corneal intrastromal injection is an important mode of gene-vector application to subepithelial layers. In a mouse model, this procedure is substantially complicated by the reduced corneal dimensions. Furthermore, it may be difficult to estimate the corneal area reached by the volume of...

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Autores principales: Matthaei, Mario, Meng, Huan, Bhutto, Imran, Xu, Qingguo, Boelke, Edwin, Hanes, Justin, Jun, Albert S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3478193/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22716296
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-17-19
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author Matthaei, Mario
Meng, Huan
Bhutto, Imran
Xu, Qingguo
Boelke, Edwin
Hanes, Justin
Jun, Albert S
author_facet Matthaei, Mario
Meng, Huan
Bhutto, Imran
Xu, Qingguo
Boelke, Edwin
Hanes, Justin
Jun, Albert S
author_sort Matthaei, Mario
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Corneal intrastromal injection is an important mode of gene-vector application to subepithelial layers. In a mouse model, this procedure is substantially complicated by the reduced corneal dimensions. Furthermore, it may be difficult to estimate the corneal area reached by the volume of a single injection. This study aimed to investigate intrastromal injections into the mouse cornea using different microneedles and to quantify the effect of injecting varying volumes. A reproducible injection technique is described. METHODS: Forty eyes of 20 129 Sv/J mice were tested. India ink was intrastromally injected using 30° beveled 33 G needles, tri-surface 25° beveled 35 G needles, or hand-pulled and 25° beveled glass needles. Each eye received a single injection of a volume of 1 or 2 μL. Corneoscleral buttons were fixed and flat mounted for computer-assisted quantification of the affected corneal area. Histological assessment was performed to investigate the intrastromal location of the injected dye. RESULTS: A mean corneal area of 5.0 ±1.4 mm(2) (mean ± SD) and 7.7 ±1.4 mm(2) was covered by intrastromal injections of 1 and 2 μL, respectively. The mean percentage of total corneal area reached ranged from 39% to 53% for 1 μL injections, and from 65% to 81% for 2 μL injections. Injections using the 33 G needles tended to provide the highest distribution area. Perforation rates were 8% for 30° beveled 33 G needles and 44% for tri-surface beveled 35 G needles. No perforation was observed with glass needle; however, intrastromal breakage of needle tips was noted in 25% of these cases. CONCLUSIONS: Intracorneal injection using a 30° beveled 33 G needle was safe and effective. The use of tri-surface beveled 35 G needles substantially increased the number of corneal perforations. Glass needles may break inside the corneal stroma. Injections of 1 μL and 2 μL resulted in an overall mean of 49% and 73% respectively of total corneal area involved.
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spelling pubmed-34781932012-10-23 Systematic assessment of microneedle injection into the mouse cornea Matthaei, Mario Meng, Huan Bhutto, Imran Xu, Qingguo Boelke, Edwin Hanes, Justin Jun, Albert S Eur J Med Res Research BACKGROUND: Corneal intrastromal injection is an important mode of gene-vector application to subepithelial layers. In a mouse model, this procedure is substantially complicated by the reduced corneal dimensions. Furthermore, it may be difficult to estimate the corneal area reached by the volume of a single injection. This study aimed to investigate intrastromal injections into the mouse cornea using different microneedles and to quantify the effect of injecting varying volumes. A reproducible injection technique is described. METHODS: Forty eyes of 20 129 Sv/J mice were tested. India ink was intrastromally injected using 30° beveled 33 G needles, tri-surface 25° beveled 35 G needles, or hand-pulled and 25° beveled glass needles. Each eye received a single injection of a volume of 1 or 2 μL. Corneoscleral buttons were fixed and flat mounted for computer-assisted quantification of the affected corneal area. Histological assessment was performed to investigate the intrastromal location of the injected dye. RESULTS: A mean corneal area of 5.0 ±1.4 mm(2) (mean ± SD) and 7.7 ±1.4 mm(2) was covered by intrastromal injections of 1 and 2 μL, respectively. The mean percentage of total corneal area reached ranged from 39% to 53% for 1 μL injections, and from 65% to 81% for 2 μL injections. Injections using the 33 G needles tended to provide the highest distribution area. Perforation rates were 8% for 30° beveled 33 G needles and 44% for tri-surface beveled 35 G needles. No perforation was observed with glass needle; however, intrastromal breakage of needle tips was noted in 25% of these cases. CONCLUSIONS: Intracorneal injection using a 30° beveled 33 G needle was safe and effective. The use of tri-surface beveled 35 G needles substantially increased the number of corneal perforations. Glass needles may break inside the corneal stroma. Injections of 1 μL and 2 μL resulted in an overall mean of 49% and 73% respectively of total corneal area involved. BioMed Central 2012-06-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3478193/ /pubmed/22716296 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-17-19 Text en Copyright ©2012 Matthaei et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Matthaei, Mario
Meng, Huan
Bhutto, Imran
Xu, Qingguo
Boelke, Edwin
Hanes, Justin
Jun, Albert S
Systematic assessment of microneedle injection into the mouse cornea
title Systematic assessment of microneedle injection into the mouse cornea
title_full Systematic assessment of microneedle injection into the mouse cornea
title_fullStr Systematic assessment of microneedle injection into the mouse cornea
title_full_unstemmed Systematic assessment of microneedle injection into the mouse cornea
title_short Systematic assessment of microneedle injection into the mouse cornea
title_sort systematic assessment of microneedle injection into the mouse cornea
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3478193/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22716296
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-17-19
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