Corneal trauma from projection of metallic mercury into the eyes
F. L. Weber and J. Babel
A 24-year-old woman sustained bilateral ocular lesions due to projection of
mercury into the eyes during an explosion in a chemical laboratory. A
lamellar keratectomy was performed on the right eye four hours after the
accident, and 12 days later, the same procedure was performed of the left
eye. Studies by light and electron microscopy were done on both specimens.
The essential findings were total loss of epithelium, necrosis of
keratocytes, absence of inflammatory reaction, and absence of superficial
stromal repair in the specimen that was obtained 12 days after the
accident. These findings indirectly confirm the importance of epithelium
and normally vascularized conjunctiva in healing wounds of the cornea.