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Vol. 220, No. 1, 2006   

Free Abstract     Article (Fulltext)     Article (PDF 176 KB)     

Review

Cortical and Subcapsular Cataracts: Significance of Physical Forces
Hans Pau

Department of Ophthalmology, Heinrich Heine University, Düsseldorf, Germany

Address of Corresponding Author

Ophthalmologica 2006;220:1-5 (DOI: 10.1159/000089267)


 goto top of page Key Words

  • Cataracts, cortical
  • Nucleus hardening
  • Shear stresses
  • Lens metabolism
  • Ion pump
  • Cataracts, subcapsular
  • Protein solution
  • Lens opacities

 goto top of page Abstract

Cortical cataracts usually begin with either sharp limited clear fluid clefts, resulting in opaque spokes, or clear lamellar separations, resulting in cuneiform opacities. They do not commence prior to 45 years of age. From this age on an increase in lens nuclei hardening can be detected. Therefore, during disaccommodation in older lenses, mechanical shear stresses must develop between the soft remaining cortices and the harder nuclei. These shear stresses are significant regarding the different cortical ruptures in predisposed lenses: in a privileged radial direction (according to zonular traction) of the sharp limited cortical spokes, or in parallel microridges at the commencement of lamellar separations, as observed when a rubber surface slides against a harder object. In pure cortical cataracts the ion pump (K+ > Na+) and investigated metabolic parameters remain largely intact. Therefore, it is not surprising that, in contrast to subcapsular cataracts, subcapsular opacities do not occur. Subcapsular cataracts are known to be caused by a variety of factors: aging, diabetes, corticosteroids, iridocyclitis, or X-ray, among many others. In contrast to cortical cataracts, subcapsular cataracts were found to be closely associated with ion pump damage (Na+ > K+) and a variety of metabolic activity alterations. In subcapsular cataracts passive fluids (from the vitreous and camera anterior) enter externally through the lens capsule. This initially forms numerous free clear, secondary grey, subcapsular fluid vacuoles. If the ion pump (metabolic barrier) is more severely damaged fluids may also enter the lens nucleus (secondary grey nuclear cataract), which rarely results in intumescent cataract. In cortical and subcapsular cataracts and lens perforations the main cause of grey opalescence appears to be the result of lens proteins (water-soluble crystalline) coming into direct contact with free fluids (water). In cortical cataracts this happens in the area of sharp limited mechanical cortical ruptures (fluid clefts), and in subcapsular cataracts during passive, external fluid entry, resulting in subcapsular fluid vacuoles and opacities, and also later grey-white nuclear opacities. The importance of water contact with water-soluble lens crystallines in behalf of light scattering and turbidness also has been investigated experimentally.

Copyright © 2006 S. Karger AG, Basel


 goto top of page Author Contacts

H. Pau, Dr. med., Dr. h.c.
Himmelgeister Landstrasse 87
DE-40589 Düsseldorf (Germany)
Fax +49 2150 917149
E-Mail pauly@uni-duesseldorf.de


 goto top of page Article Information

Received: June 30, 2005
Accepted: July 1, 2005
Number of Print Pages : 5
Number of Figures : 5, Number of Tables : 0, Number of References : 35

 
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