Epithelial basement membrane dystrophy explained

Synonym:Map-dot-fingerprint dystrophy and Cogans's microcystic dystrophy
Specialty:ophthalmology

Epithelial basement membrane dystrophy (EBMD) is a disorder of the eye that can cause pain and dryness.

It is sometimes included in the group of corneal dystrophies. It diverges from the formal definition of corneal dystrophy since it is non-familial in most cases. It also has a fluctuating course, while for a typical corneal dystrophy the course is progressive. When it is considered part of this group, it is the most common type of corneal dystrophy.[1]

Signs and symptoms

Patients may complain of severe problems with dry eyes, or with visual obscurations.[2] It can also be asymptomatic, and only discovered because of subtle lines and marks seen during an eye exam.

EBMD is a bilateral anterior corneal dystrophy characterized by grayish epithelial fingerprint lines, geographic map-like lines, and dots (or microcysts) on slit-lamp examination. Findings are variable and can change with time. While the disorder is usually asymptomatic, up to 10% of patients may have recurrent corneal erosions, usually beginning after age 30; conversely, 50% of patients presenting with idiopathic recurrent erosions have evidence of this dystrophy.

Pathophysiology

In some families autosomal dominant inheritance and point mutations in the TGFBI gene encoding keratoepithelin have been identified,[3] but according to the International Committee for Classification of Corneal Diseases (IC3D)[4] the available data still does not merit a confident inclusion of EBMD in the group of corneal dystrophies. In view of this, the more accurate designation of the disease is possibly not dystrophy but corneal degeneration.[5]

The main pathological feature of the disease is thickened, multilaminar and disfigured basement membrane of corneal epithelium. The change in the structure affects the epithelium, some cells of which may become entrapped in the rugged membrane and fail to migrate to the surface where they should undergo desquamation.

Treatment

Phototherapeutic keratectomy (PTK) done by an ophthalmologist can restore and preserve useful visual function for a significant period of time in patients with anterior corneal dystrophies including EBMD.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Chan, Colin. Dry Eye: A Practical Approach. Springer. 2015-02-18. 9783662441060. en. 111–112.
  2. Web site: When Should You Treat EBMD with PTK? . John R. Martinelli, O.D. . 22 March 2010 . Review of Optometry . 16 March 2017.
  3. Boutboul S, Black GC, Moore JE, Sinton J, Menasche M, Munier FL, Laroche L, Abitbol M, Schorderet DF . A subset of patients with epithelial basement membrane corneal dystrophy have mutations in TGFBI/BIGH3 . . 27 . 6 . 553–7 . June 2006 . 16652336 . 10.1002/humu.20331. 41528624 .
  4. Weiss JS, Møller HU, Lisch W, Kinoshita S, Aldave AJ, Belin MW, Kivelä T, Busin M, Munier FL, Seitz B, Sutphin J, Bredrup C, Mannis MJ, Rapuano CJ, Van Rij G, Kim EK, Klintworth GK . The IC3D classification of the corneal dystrophies . . 27 . Suppl 2 . S1–83 . December 2008 . 19337156 . 2866169 . 10.1097/ICO.0b013e31817780fb .
  5. Web site: Verdier . David D . Map-dot-fingerprint Dystrophy: Background, Pathophysiology, Epidemiology . Medscape Reference . 2019-02-14 . 2024-08-06.