Importance of Tear Film Instability in Dry Eye Disease in Office Workers Using Visual Display Terminals: The Osaka Study

To evaluate the relationship between subjective symptoms and clinical signs in dry eye disease (DED) in office workers using visual display terminals (VDTs). Cross-sectional study. This study involved 672 Japanese young and middle-aged office workers who use VDTs. The subjects completed questionnair...

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Published inAmerican journal of ophthalmology Vol. 159; no. 4; pp. 748 - 754
Main Authors Yokoi, Norihiko, Uchino, Miki, Uchino, Yuichi, Dogru, Murat, Kawashima, Motoko, Komuro, Aoi, Sonomura, Yukiko, Kato, Hiroaki, Tsubota, Kazuo, Kinoshita, Shigeru
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.04.2015
Elsevier Limited
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Summary:To evaluate the relationship between subjective symptoms and clinical signs in dry eye disease (DED) in office workers using visual display terminals (VDTs). Cross-sectional study. This study involved 672 Japanese young and middle-aged office workers who use VDTs. The subjects completed questionnaires designed to detect subjective symptoms and risk factors for DED. Dry eye tests, including tear film break-up time (TBUT), corneal-conjunctival staining with fluorescein and lissamine green, and the Schirmer test, were performed. Based on the Japanese diagnostic criteria for DED, the subjects were classified into 3 groups: definite DED, probable DED, and non-DED. Between each group, subjective symptoms and clinical signs were compared. Of the 672 subjects, 561 (374 male, 187 female) completed the questionnaire (response rate: 83.5%). Definite DED was diagnosed in 65 subjects (11.6%), probable DED in 303 subjects (54.0%), and non-DED in 193 subjects (34.4%). The mean subjective symptom score was significantly less in subjects with probable DED (2.05 ± 0.42) and non-DED (1.63 ± 0.38) than in those with definite DED (2.19 ± 0.40) (P < .05 and P < .01, respectively). In the subjects with probable DED, a subgroup with positive subjective symptoms and abnormal TBUT (≤5 seconds) was categorized as short TBUT-type DED, and it was found that they had a higher subjective symptom score (2.09 ± 0.40), equivalent to that of those with definite DED (P = .269). Despite no or minor epithelial damage, the severity of subjective symptoms was greater in short TBUT-type DED, most likely attributable to tear film instability. Thus, it might prove important to evaluate TBUT to successfully treat those patients.
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ISSN:0002-9394
1879-1891
1879-1891
DOI:10.1016/j.ajo.2014.12.019