The effect of low-dose aspirin on dry eye parameters and ocular surface disease index questionnaire
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info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccessTarih
2018Yazar
Yazıcı, AlperSarı, Esin
Ayhan, Erkan
Şahin, Gözde
Tıskaoğlu, Nesime Setge
Gürbüzer, Taha
Kurt, Hüseyin
Ermiş, Sıtkı Samet
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Purpose: To evaluate the effects of acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) on tear film parameters and dry eye disease.
Methods: Fifty-seven patients using low-dose aspirin regularly for antiaggregant purposes as well as 49 controls, who required antiaggregant treatment but who had not yet started, were included in the study. Tear osmolarity, tear break-up time (TBUT), Schirmer and Oxford grading of ocular surface staining were performed on all patients and dry eye symptomatology was assessed using the ocular surface disease index questionnaire (OSDI).
Results: The mean osmolarity was 302.11 +/- 16.22 mOsm/L in the aspirin group and 313.88 +/- 19.57 mOsm/L in the control group (P < 0.01). The mean Schirmer's score was 24.16 +/- 10.52 mm and 21.94 +/- 10.11 mm (P = 0.232), TBUT was 13.61 +/- 3.31 s and 10.39 +/- 4.46 s (P < 0.01), OSDI score was 5.15 +/- 5.98 and 16.94 +/- 14.17 (P < 0.01), and Oxford score was 0.12 +/- 0.33 and 0.12 +/- 0.44 in aspirin and control groups, respectively (P = 0.99). Dry eye diagnosis was lower in the aspirin group, but statistical significance was present only in TBUT and osmolarity-based dry eye diagnosis (P <= 0.01). In terms of symptom-based dry eye diagnosis with the threshold of OSDI >= 23, none of the aspirin group had dry eye diagnosis, whereas 32.6% of the control group had the diagnosis (P < 0.01).
Conclusions: The use of low-dose aspirin might be great option for treatment of ocular surface inflammatory disease through increasing TBUT and decreasing tear osmolarity with a resultant symptomatic satisfaction.