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      An update on chemical eye burns

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      Eye
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          Ocular chemical injuries vary in severity, with the more severe end of the spectrum having profound visual consequences and medicolegal implications. Grading of ocular injuries is critical for determining acute treatment and visual prognosis. Poor immediate management results in more challenging treatment of acute disease. Similarly, poorly controlled acute disease results in more treatment-resistant chronic ocular disease. Despite several decades of research and public health initiatives, simple and effective interventions such as wearing protective eyewear and immediate irrigation of eyes remain as key challenges. Education and prevention are therefore important public health messages. Hurdles in the acute management of disease include poor evidence-base for commonly used treatments (e.g. based on experimental animal studies), reduced treatment adherence rates and high clinic non-attendance rates. The evolution of treatment strategies, particularly limbal stem cell transplantation, has revolutionised the visual and cosmetic outcomes in chronic phases of disease. It is therefore increasingly important to consider tertiary referral for patients with limbal stem cell failure or vision-limiting corneal scarring.

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          A new classification of ocular surface burns.

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            Is Open Access

            Simple Limbal Epithelial Transplantation: Long-Term Clinical Outcomes in 125 Cases of Unilateral Chronic Ocular Surface Burns.

            This study describes the long-term clinical outcomes of autologous simple limbal epithelial transplantation (SLET), a relatively new technique of limbal stem cell transplantation.
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              Growth factors: importance in wound healing and maintenance of transparency of the cornea

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Eye
                Eye
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0950-222X
                1476-5454
                May 13 2019
                Article
                10.1038/s41433-019-0456-5
                7002428
                31086244
                12064694-0d56-4881-96f9-2a64de99b566
                © 2019

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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