Abstract
Purpose
To examine the changes in meibomian gland morphology and ocular higher-order aberrations (HOAs) in eyes with chalazion and its excision.
Methods
Seven male patients with previous history of chalazion excision and seven control male subjects were enrolled. Changes in meibomian gland morphology (meiboscores, gland dropout, and shortening) were evaluated by using meibography equipped in a wavefront analyzer KR-1W and in a slit-lamp device BG-4M. Ocular HOAs were measured sequentially with KR-1W. The tear film breakup time (BUT) was measured.
Results
Both KR-1W and BG-4M visualized meibomian gland as clear similar images. The tear film BUT (mean ± SD, 5.6±3.0 vs 9.4±2.3 seconds, P=0.025), the total meiboscore (median [interquartile range], 2 (2−3) vs 0 (0−1), P=0.007) as well as the meibomian gland dropout rate (86% vs 14%, P=0.008) and shortening rate (100% vs 29%, P=0.031) differed significantly between the patient and control groups. The first total ocular HOAs (0.142±0.063 vs 0.130±0.015, P=0.80) were similar in both groups, whereas the stability index of the total HOAs over time (0.0041±0.0048 vs −0.0012±0.0020, P=0.030) differed significantly between the patient and control groups.
Conclusions
Chalazion and its excision were associated with dropout and shortening rate of meibomian glands. The morphological changes of meibomian glands in chalazion may be associated to instability of the tear film, which was suggested by the tear film BUT and the stability of ocular HOAs.
Keywords: meibomian gland, meibography, wavefront analyzer, higher-order aberrations, chalazion excision
Plain language summary
Why was the study done? Chalazion is a small tumor of the eyelid arising from a blocked meibomian gland. Chalazion itself or chalazion excision may damage the associated meibomian glands. Changes in meibomian gland morphology after chalazion remain unclear, however. Chalazion excision was found to affect visual function soon after surgery. Changes in ocular higher-ocular aberrations (HOAs: small optical irregularities or imperfections of the eye which cannot be corrected by simple sphere and cylinder corrections) at several years after chalazion remain unclear. This study aimed to examine the effects of chalazion on meibomian glands and ocular HOAs.
What did the researchers do and find? Seven males after chalazion excision and seven control males were enrolled. We evaluated changes in meibomian gland morphology using two kinds of meibography. We measured ocular HOAs using the wavefront analyzer. We found that 1) dropout and shortening of meibomian glands were seen more often in patients than in controls; 2) the total HOAs showed an upward curve in patients, but remained constant in controls.
What do these results mean? The morphological changes of meibomian glands in chalazion may be associated to instability of the tear film, which was suggested by the stability of ocular HOAs.
Introduction
Chalazion is a common eyelid disease. The International Workshop on Meibomian Gland Dysfunction refers to chalazion as a condition with localized involvement of meibomian glands. Chalazion may be causal of, or secondary to, meibomian gland dysfunction, or it may occur incidentally.1 Chalazion is a granulomatous inflammatory growth that forms within the upper or lower eyelid, or within both lids simultaneously,2 with chalazion excision being an effective surgery for lesions that do not heal. Chalazion itself or chalazion excision may damage the associated meibomian glands. Little is known of changes in meibomian gland morphology after chalazion formation and excision, however.
We have previously developed a noninvasive, patient-friendly meibographic system that is based on an infrared filter and an infrared charge-coupled device (CCD) camera attached to a slit-lamp device (BG-4M; Topcon, Tokyo, Japan) and which allows for a rapid and thorough examination for detection of morphological changes in meibomian glands throughout the eye.3 The wavefront analyzer (KR-1W; Topcon, Tokyo, Japan) combines aberrometry, topography, keratometry, pupillometry, and autorefraction. It is also equipped with an infrared (940 nm) observation system for the anterior eye to allow alignment. We have now modified this observation system to capture a still image of the meibomian glands.
Chalazion excision was found to reduce corneal astigmatism and irregularity at 1 month after surgery.4 Chalazion was also shown to increase higher-order aberrations (HOAs), as measured with a Hartmann–Shack aberrometer, and chalazion excision reduced HOAs at 2 months after surgery.5 However, changes in ocular HOAs at several years after chalazion excision have not been investigated.
We have now examined morphological changes of meibomian glands in patients with a history of chalazion excision both with the BG-4M system and with the KR-1W analyzer equipped with the newly modified program. We compared the results obtained with these two systems as well as examined the effects on chalazion of ocular HOAs.
Methods
Subjects
Male patients with a history of chalazion excision and age-matched control male individuals (healthy volunteers) were enrolled in this study. Inclusion criteria for both groups included phakic, the pupil diameter of >4 mm without mydriasis, and a best corrected visual acuity of 20/20 or better, which was sufficient to allow fixation on the target of the wavefront analyzer. Exclusion criteria for both groups included blepharitis, continuous eyedrop use, ophthalmic disorders (including superficial punctate keratopathy) other than refractive errors and mild cataracts, a history of previous ocular surgeries other than chalazion excision, and systemic or ocular diseases that might interfere with tear film production or function. The presented data were obtained from the left eye of each subject in the control group and from the eye with a history of chalazion in the patient group (if a patient had undergone surgery on both eyes, the left eye was selected for examination; if the left eye was excluded, data were obtained from the right eye). Measurements were performed in a room maintained at a temperature of 22°C±3°C and a humidity of 40%±4%. The research protocol was approved by the institutional review board of the University of Tokyo School of Medicine, and written informed consent was obtained from each subject before examination. The study adhered to the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki.
Examinations
The following tests were performed sequentially: measurement of ocular HOAs with KR-1W (by SF), a slit-lamp examination of lid margin abnormalities as well as of the cornea and conjunctiva before and after fluorescein staining, measurement of tear film breakup time (BUT) (by RA), assessment of tear production with Schirmer’s test without topical anesthesia (by RA), noninvasive meibography with the modified KR-1W system (by SF) and with BG-4M (by RS), and grading of meibum expression (by RS). The tests were conducted in this sequence in order to minimize the risk of one test interfering with the next one.6 Lid margin abnormalities were scored from 0 to 4 on the basis of the absence or presence of an irregular lid margin, vascular engorgement, plugging of meibomian gland orifices, or a shift in the mucocutaneous junction, with an absolute score of 0 or 1 for each of these four criteria (ie, the severity of each condition was not taken into consideration). The tear film BUT was measured three consecutive times after the instillation of fluorescein. The extent to which meibomian secretion (meibum) was induced in response to the application of digital pressure to the upper tarsus was evaluated semiquantitatively according to the following scale:7 0, clear meibum easily expressed; 1, cloudy meibum expressed with mild pressure; 2, cloudy meibum expressed with moderate pressure; and 3, meibum not expressed, even with hard pressure.
Meibography
We examined the morphology of meibomian glands both with the noncontact meibography system mounted on a slit-lamp microscope3 (BG-4M) and with the wavefront analyzer (KR-1W) equipped with newly modified noninvasive meibography program, and we compared morphological changes of each gland duct and acinus after recording the photographs obtained with these two systems. Our new noninvasive meibography program for KR-1W comprises an infrared light-emitting diode (LED) (wavelength of 940±20 nm) as a light source and an infrared CCD video camera (TCK237TPL; Texas Instruments, Dallas, TX, USA). When the eyelid is everted, an image of the meibomian glands, transilluminated from the conjunctival side by the infrared LED, is captured by the highly sensitive CCD camera. Less than 1 minute is required to observe the meibomian glands of both the upper and lower eyelids. Photographs of the meibomian glands can be digitally recorded.
The upper and lower eyelids were turned over, and the meibomian glands were observed with the two noninvasive infrared meibographic systems. Partial or complete loss of the meibomian glands was scored according to the following scale (meiboscore) for each eyelid: grade 0, no loss of meibomian glands; grade 1, the affected area was <33% of the total area occupied by the meibomian glands; grade 2, the affected area was between 33% and 66% of the total area occupied by the meibomian glands; grade 3, the affected area was >66% of the total area occupied by the meibomian glands.3 Meiboscores for the upper and lower eyelids were summed for each eye. Quantitative analysis was performed to examine the similarity of the meibomian gland images by the two methods. The software for image analysis was used as previously described.8,9 Lid borders were automatically determined. The software evaluated the distribution of the luminance and, by enhancing the contrast and reducing image noise, the meibomian gland area was automatically discriminated. The software calculated the ratio of the total meibomian gland area relative to the total analysis area in each eyelid. To examine the similarity of the meibomian gland images obtained by the two methods, we compared the corresponding meiboscores and the ratios of meibomian gland area to total analysis area. The presence of dropout or shortening of the meibomian glands was also noted.
Measurement of ocular HOAs
Serial ocular HOAs were determined with the use of the program for dry eye of a Hartmann–Shack wavefront aberrometer (KR-1W).10–13 The details of this apparatus were described previously.14,15 Subjects were instructed to keep their eyes open for 10 seconds. The HOAs for a 4-mm pupil diameter were expanded into a set of orthogonal Zernike polynomials. The magnitudes of the coefficients of the Zernike polynomials are represented as the root mean square (RMS) and are used to show the wavefront aberrations. The RMS of the third-order Zernike coefficients (the square root of the sum of the squared coefficients of C3−3, C3−1, C31, and C33) was considered to represent a coma-like aberration, and the RMS of the fourth-order coefficients (the square root of the sum of the squared coefficients of C4−4, C4−2, C40, C42, and C44) was considered to denote a spherical-like aberration. The square root of the sum of the squared coefficients of C3−3 and C33 was calculated as a trefoil aberration. Total HOAs were defined as the RMS of the magnitudes for the third- and fourth-order aberrations. The stability index (SI) of the total HOAs,10–13 defined as the slope of the linear regression line of the total ocular HOAs between blinks, was used to indicate the sequential change in HOAs over time. The first coma-like, spherical-like, and trefoil aberrations, the first total HOAs as well as the SI of the total HOAs over time were compared between the two subject groups.
Statistical analysis
Data are presented as median (interquartile range) for ordinal variables and mean values ± standard deviations (SD) for continuous variables. The differences in the average for age, lid margin abnormalities, BUT, Schirmer’s test, meiboscores, meibum grades, coma-like, spherical-like, and trefoil aberrations, first total HOAs, as well as SI between the two groups of subjects were evaluated with the Mann–Whitney U-test. The frequencies of meibomian gland dropout and shortening were compared between the two groups with Fisher’s exact test. The differences in the average for the ratios of meibomian gland area to total analysis area in each eyelid were evaluated with the Mann–Whitney U-test. The relation between these ratios using noncontact meibography equipped in a wavefront analyzer and in a slit-lamp microscope was examined with Spearman’s correlation coefficient. The relation between the time and the total HOAs in the representative patient with a history of chalazion was analyzed with Spearman’s correlation coefficient. A P-value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Results
Demographics
Seven male patients with a history of chalazion (age, mean ± SD, 44.3±11.2 years, range, 29–56 years) and seven age-matched control male individuals (healthy volunteers; age, mean ± SD, 38.0±8.2 years, range, 29–53 years) were enrolled in the study. No significant difference in age was apparent between the two groups of eyes (P=0.34). Patients underwent the chalazion excision 20.6±15.9 (range, 3–50) years before the examination.
Tear film parameters
Tear film parameters for the patients with a history of chalazion excision and control individuals are shown in Table 1. Tear film BUT (mean ± SD, 5.6±3.0 vs 9.4±2.3 seconds, P=0.025) differed significantly between the patient and control groups. There was no significant difference in the lid margin abnormality score, the meibum grade, or Schirmer’s test value between the two groups of subjects.
Table 1.
Parameters | Patients with a history of chalazion excision (n=7) | Controls (n=7) | P-value |
---|---|---|---|
Lid margin abnormality score (0–4) | 2 (0–3) | 0 (0–1) | 0.092 |
Meibum grade (0–3) | 1 (0–2) | 1 (0–1) | 0.54 |
Schirmer’s test value (mm) | 15.7±11.5 | 26.4±8.1 | 0.070 |
BUT with fluorescein (seconds) | 5.6±3.0 | 9.4±2.3 | 0.025* |
Coma-like aberrations (μm) | 0.114±0.042 | 0.120±0.019 | 0.61 |
Spherical-like aberrations (μm) | 0.085±0.053 | 0.047±0.015 | 0.20 |
Trefoil aberrations (μm) | 0.129±0.191 | 0.063±0.020 | 0.90 |
First total ocular HOAs | 0.142±0.063 | 0.130±0.015 | 0.80 |
SI of total HOAs | 0.0041±0.0048 | −0.0012±0.0020 | 0.030* |
Notes: Data are median (interquartile range) for ordinal variables and mean values ± standard deviations for continuous variables. P-values were determined with the Mann–Whitney U-test;
P<0.05.
Abbreviations: BUT, breakup time; HOAs, higher-order aberrations; SI, stability index.
Meibography
Normal meibomian glands were detected as long, straight, and narrow grape-like clusters of numerous small hyperilluminated spots, similarly corresponding to individual acini. Comparison of the ratios of meibomian gland area to total analysis area obtained with the noncontact meibography system mounted on a slit-lamp microscope and with the modified version of the KR-1W wavefront analyzer revealed a similar ability to detect morphological changes in meibomian glands (Table 2). Occasionally, the pictures for the new noninvasive meibography program attached to the wavefront analyzer did not be as sharp as those for the noncontact meibography equipped with a slit-lamp. Focal blurry part of the pictures were detected in 2 of the 14 eyes (14%) in the upper and lower eyelids, respectively, but it was able to score the grades for each eyelid and detect the presence of gland dropout or shortening of the meibomian glands. Both systems thus similarly detected meibomian gland dropout and shortening in patients with a history of chalazion (Figure 1). For all examined eyelids of both the control and patient groups, the meiboscore obtained with the modified KR-1W system was the same as that obtained with the noncontact meibography system attached to a slit-lamp. Meibomian gland dropout was observed in 6 of 7 eyes (86%) in the patient group and in 1 of 7 eyes (14%) in the control group (P=0.008). Meibomian gland shortening was observed in 7 of 7 eyes (100%) in the patient group and in 2 of 7 eyes (29%) in the control group (P=0.031; Table 3). Focal meibomian gland dropout or shortening was detected in 4 of 7 eyes (57%) in the patient group, whereas 4 of the 7 eyes (57%) in this group manifested multiple or diffuse morphological changes of meibomian glands.
Table 2.
Eyelid | Ratio of meibomian gland area to total analysis area (%) | Mann–Whitney, U-test | Spearman’s correlation coefficient | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
||||
Wavefront analyzer (n=12) (mean ± SD) | Slit-lamp microscope (n=12) (mean ± SD) | P-value | ρ | P-value | |
Upper eyelid | 45.2±9.5 | 48.7±7.2 | 0.064 | 0.636 | 0.026* |
Lower eyelid | 49.5±11.1 | 54.1±10.6 | 0.15 | 0.615 | 0.033* |
Notes: P-values for two averages were evaluated with the Mann–Whitney U-test. Spearman’s correlation coefficient (ρ) and P-values were determined for the relation between the ratios of meibomian gland area to total analysis area in each eyelid;
P<0.05.
Abbreviation: SD, standard deviation.
Table 3.
Parameters | Patients with a history of chalazion (n=7) | Controls (n=7) | P-value |
---|---|---|---|
Meiboscore (upper eyelid) (0–3) | 2 (1–2) | 0 (0–1) | 0.008* |
Meiboscore (lower eyelid) (0–3) | 1 (0–1) | 0 (0–0) | 0.042* |
Meiboscore (total) (0–6) | 2 (2–3) | 0 (0–1) | 0.007* |
Dropout | 6 (86%) | 1 (14%) | 0.008* |
Shortening | 7 (100%) | 2 (29%) | 0.031* |
Notes: P-values were determined with the Mann–Whitney U-test or Fisher’s exact test;
P<0.05.
Measurement of ocular HOAs
The wavefront color-coded maps of ocular HOAs obtained between blinks for representative individuals in the patient and control groups are shown together with the changes in the simulated retinal images of a Landolt ring (optotype with logMAR value of +0.7) in Figure 2. In healthy eyes, the sequential total HOAs remained constant at each blink (Figures 2A and 3A); no marked deterioration was thus apparent in consecutive wavefront maps and simulated retinal images. In contrast, the total HOAs tended to show an upward curve between blinks in patients with a history of chalazion (Figures 2B and 3B). Table 1 shows the mean coma-like, spherical-like, and trefoil aberrations, first total ocular HOAs and the SI calculated from the data obtained from both patients and control subjects. The coma-like, spherical-like, and trefoil aberrations, first total ocular HOAs were similar (P=0.61, 0.20, 0.90, and 0.80, respectively) for the two groups, whereas the SI of the total HOAs over time was significantly (P=0.030) greater for patients than for controls.
Discussion
In this study, we obtained clear images of the meibomian glands of all subjects using either the noninvasive meibography system attached to a slit-lamp3 (BG-4M) or the newly developed noninvasive meibography system based on the KR-1W wavefront analyzer. Both systems showed similar abilities to detect morphological changes of meibomian glands (Table 2). Noninvasive meibography has previously been demonstrated to be highly useful for observing such morphological changes.3,8,9,16–22 In this study, gland dropout and shortening were observed in patients with a history of chalazion, consistent with previous findings obtained with the Keratograph 4 (OCULUS, Wetzlar, Germany) equipped with an infrared illumination system showing that the area of recurrent chalazion exhibited partial or complete meibomian gland loss and that active chalazia as well as the site of chalazion incision and drainage manifested meibomian gland dropout.23 The changes in meibomian gland morphology were apparent many years after chalazion development and its excision in this study.
The meibomian glands are specialized holocrine glands that secrete the lipid layer of the tear film, which helps prevent tear film evaporation. Localized involvement of meibomian glands in conditions such as chalazion has been thought not to result in tear film abnormalities.24 A recent study showed that the area of meibomian gland loss correlates inversely with lipid layer thickness, and that lipid layer thickness correlates positively with tear film BUT, however.25 In this study, the tear film BUT was significantly shorter and meiboscores were significantly higher in the patients with a history of chalazion excision than that in control subjects, whereas the lid margin abnormality score, Schirmer’s test values, or meibum grade did not differ significantly between the two groups. We also found that the coma-like, spherical-like, and trefoil aberrations, as well as the first total ocular HOAs were similar in the two groups of subjects. Whereas the sequential total HOAs remained constant over time in our control subjects, they tended to show an upward curve in the patients with a history of chalazion excision. The SI for the total HOAs over time was thus significantly greater in the patient group than in the control group. Given that BUT is affected by not only the lipid layer but also the mucin and aqueous layers of the tear film, tear film stability is likely influenced by different tear film components, such as meibomian lipids, ocular mucins, and proteins.26 The aqueous component of tear film was not deficient in the patients in our study. Moreover, sequential changes in total HOAs in subjects with a short tear film BUT were previously found to show a sawtooth pattern with a marked upward curve that increased after blinking.12 These various observations suggest that morphological changes of meibomian glands may lead to instability of the tear film.
Some of the patients with a history of chalazion in this study had experienced recurrent episodes of chalazion or meibomian gland concretion. Furthermore, some of the lids of the control subjects manifested morphological changes of meibomian glands. Four of 7 eyes (57%) in the patient group showed multiple or diffuse morphological changes of meibomian glands. Given that the International Workshop on Meibomian Gland Dysfunction considers that chalazion may be associated with meibomian gland dysfunction,27 patients in this study essentially may have had this condition.
Occasionally, the pictures for the new noninvasive meibography program equipped to the wavefront analyzer (KR-1W) were not as clear as those for the noncontact meibography equipped with a slit-lamp. We speculated that the light source of each imaging tool caused difference of the meibomian gland images. The noncontact meibography equipped with a slit-lamp uses a point light source; however, KR-1W wavefront analyzer equipped noninvasive meibography program was applied with a ring illumination for videokeratography. Specular reflection of the ring illumination could stripe and blur the part of the meibography pictures and make it difficult to distinguish meibomian gland area from nonmeibomian gland area. In addition to that, the difference in resolution and sensitivity of the equipped digital camera between the two instruments may be one of the cause of the different images of meibography. Overall, the meibomian gland images obtained by the wavefront analyzer (KR-1W) equipped with newly modified noninvasive meibography program were sufficient for analyzing meibomian gland morphology.
Our study has some limitations. Detailed information on the precise location of chalazion and the surgical procedure were not available for the patients with a history of chalazion and its excision, because of the retrospective design of the study. We thus were not able to observe the morphology of meibomian glands before chalazion formation or before its excision. Furthermore, the observed increase in the frequency of meibomian gland dropout or shortening, in the study, patients might be the result of chalazion itself or of the invasive surgery. Prospective clinical studies will be required to confirm the effects of chalazion itself and its excision on the morphology of meibomian glands and ocular HOAs.
Conclusion
Chalazion itself and chalazion excision changed the morphology of meibomian glands and thereby might affect meibomian gland function as well as visual function.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Mr Hideaki Tokoro, Mr Tsuyoshi Haraguchi, and Mr Jun Suehiro of Topcon (Itabashi, Tokyo, Japan) for their help in constructing this wavefront analyzer equipped newly modified noninvasive meibography program. The authors also would like to thank Dr Shiro Amano of Inoue Eye Hospital (Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan) for his advice.
Footnotes
Disclosure
Dr Arita holds a patent on the noncontact meibography system used in the study (JP Patent Registration No 5281846, US Patent Publication No 2011-0273550A1, EP Patent Publication No 2189108A1). Drs Fukuoka, Shirakawa, and Morishige report no conflicts of interest in this work.
References
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