Purpose. To investigate the susceptibility to rupture of a human donor
cornea with fully healed radial keratotomy (RK) incisions using biome
chanical measurement methods and finite element analysis. Methods. A h
uman cornea 8 years after RK was cut into four strips and subjected to
tensile testing until rupture occurred. The fellow cornea was pressur
ized on an artificial anterior chamber beyond the initiation of wound
gape. The tensile strengths of nine strips from unincised corneas were
measured as controls. To investigate the effect of epithelial plugs o
n the RK strip test results, a finite element model of a strip contain
ing an epithelial plug was analyzed.Results. Rupture occurred along th
e wound site with wide variability in the measured tensile strengths.
There was no significant difference in tensile strength between the RK
corneal strips (16.6 +/- 4.43 N/mm(2)) and the control strips (19.1 /- 3.50 N/mm(2)). Four of the eight incisions of the fellow RK cornea
gaped, but the cornea did not rupture up to a pressure of 2740 mm Hg.
An epithelial plug of 10% of the corneal thickness was found in one of
the incisions. The finite element results demonstrated higher stresse
s at the wound site that increased with the size of the epithelial plu
g. Conclusions. The presence of an epithelial plug in a fully healed r
adial keratotomy incision will create a stress concentration at the in
cision site that may predispose the cornea to rupture. The variability
in the strength measurements indicates that the increase in rupture s
usceptibility due to RK may be hard to predict and may depend on facto
rs such as the size of the plug and the strength of the wound collagen
.