[HTML][HTML] Intraocular pressure measurement in mice: a comparison between Goldmann and rebound tonometry

CY Kim, MH Kuehn, MG Anderson, YH Kwon - Eye, 2007 - nature.com
CY Kim, MH Kuehn, MG Anderson, YH Kwon
Eye, 2007nature.com
Purpose The development of mouse models of glaucoma requires methods to accurately
measure the intraocular pressure (IOP) in this species. The aim of this study was to compare
the accuracy of IOP measurements in mice between modified Goldmann and rebound
tonometers. Methods IOP was measured either with a modified Goldmann or a rebound
tonometer while simultaneously measuring the IOP using invasive manometry in enucleated
eyes and in vivo. The level of IOP was controlled hydrostatically. The agreement and …
Abstract
Purpose
The development of mouse models of glaucoma requires methods to accurately measure the intraocular pressure (IOP) in this species. The aim of this study was to compare the accuracy of IOP measurements in mice between modified Goldmann and rebound tonometers.
Methods
IOP was measured either with a modified Goldmann or a rebound tonometer while simultaneously measuring the IOP using invasive manometry in enucleated eyes and in vivo. The level of IOP was controlled hydrostatically. The agreement and correlation between the IOP determined by invasive manometry and by either noninvasive method was evaluated. In addition, the IOP was determined by both noninvasive methods in a cohort of mice with laser-induced ocular hypertension (OHT), and the agreement and correlation between the two tonometry methods were evaluated.
Results
Measured IOP by either noninvasive tonometer correlated well with those recorded simultaneously by invasive manometry (r= 0.98 for rebound and r= 0.94 for Goldmann). In mice with OHT, the IOP correlation between rebound and modified Goldmann was moderate (r= 0.71); the IOP measured by modified Goldmann tonometry was consistently higher than that by rebound by approximately 5 mmHg. However, the relative per cent increases in IOP were similar between the two methods.
Conclusion
Both noninvasive methods of IOP measurements in mice are suitable to detect changes in IOP although rebound tonometry correlated better with the invasive manometry readings. The results suggest that the relative, rather than absolute, IOP offers a more reliable means of correlating findings from studies using different tonometers.
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