Grading Of Corneal and Conjunctival Staining in the Context of Other Dry Eye Tests
University of Oxford · National Eye Institute
Abstract
The grading of corneal and conjunctival staining is described, using the Oxford Scheme, including biomicroscopy, optical filters, illumination conditions, and the characteristics of and instillation techniques used for, selected clinical dyes.
A series of panels, labeled A-E, in order of increasing severity, reproducing the staining patterns encountered in dry eye, are used as a guide to grade the degree of staining seen in the patient. The amount of staining seen in each panel, represented by punctate dots, increases by 0.5 of the log of the number of dots between panels B to E. The use of the vital dyes fluorescein, lissamine green, and rose Bengal is described; fluorescein and lissamine green, used in conjunction with appropriate absorption filters, are recommended for use in clinical trials. The placement of staining in relation to the sequence of other diagnostic tests is discussed.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 6.67
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 45
Authors
3- AJAnthony J. BronCorresponding
University of Oxford, National Eye Institute
- VEVictoria E. Evans
National Eye Institute
- JAJanine A. Smith
National Eye Institute
Topics & keywords
- Staining
- Grading (engineering)
- Grading scale
- Fluorescein
- Ophthalmology
- Rose bengal
- Conjunctiva
- Stain