Sodium hyaluronate and polyvinyl alcohol artificial tear preparations. A comparison in patients with keratoconjunctivitis sicca
J. D. Nelson and R. L. Farris
Department of Ophthalmology, St Paul-Ramsey Medical Center, MN 55101.
An unpreserved artificial tear substitute containing 0.1% sodium
hyaluronate was compared with a preparation containing 1.4% polyvinyl
alcohol and 0.5% chlorobutanol in a controlled, double-masked, randomized
study in patients with moderately severe keratoconjunctivitis sicca.
Patients were evaluated initially, at 1, 4, and 8 weeks. The dry-eye status
was evaluated by means of tear-film osmolality, tear breakup time, rose
bengal staining, Schirmer's test (without anesthesia), and ocular
surface-impression cytology. In general, neither preparation was found to
be superior to the other. In both study groups, the mean tear-film
osmolality and rose bengal staining score improved over the eight-week
study, but the degree of squamous metaplasia of the bulbar conjunctival
surface, as shown by impression cytology, did not change significantly.