Quantitative and conformational characterization of lysozyme deposited on balafilcon and etafilcon contact lens materials
- 1 January 2004
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Current Eye Research
- Vol. 28 (1), 25-36
- https://doi.org/10.1076/ceyr.28.1.25.23496
Abstract
To determine whether differences in lysozyme deposition and/or activity exist on worn etafilcon and balafilcon contact lenses following care with a polyquaternium-based system (PQ) or a polyhexanide-based system (PHMB). Following acid-based deposit extraction, lysozyme concentration was determined via Western blotting and lysozyme activity was determined by a micrococcyl assay. Lysozyme deposition on etafilcon lenses was greater following disinfection with the PHMB-based system (1551 +/- 371 micro g/lens vs 935 +/- 271 micro g/lens; p < 0.001). Deposition on balafilcon lenses was not influenced by the care regimen (10 +/- 3.5 micro g/lens vs 10 +/- 5 micro g/lens; p = 0.89). For both materials, the percentage of denatured lysozyme was greater when they were exposed to the PHMB-based system (28 vs 21%; p = 0.05 (etafilcon) and 57 vs 40%; p = 0.04 (balafilcon)). The quantity and conformation of lysozyme deposited on hydrogel contact lens materials is significantly influenced by both lens material and care regimen.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- XPS and surface-MALDI-MS characterisation of worn HEMA-based contact lensesBiomaterials, 2001
- Soft contact lens polymers: an evolutionBiomaterials, 2001
- Characterization of plasma proteins adsorbed onto biomaterials by MALDI-TOFMSBiomaterials, 2000
- Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry detection of proteins adsorbedin vivo onto contact lensesJournal of Biomedical Materials Research, 2000
- Irreversible adsorption of human serum albumin to hydrogel contact lenses: a study using electron spin resonance spectroscopyBiomaterials, 1999
- Competitive protein adsorption as observed by surface plasmon resonanceBiomaterials, 1999
- A hydrophobic interaction site for lysozyme binding to polyethylene glycol and model contact lens polymersBiomaterials, 1998
- Detection of Mucin Deposits on Hydrogel Contact Lenses: Evaluation of Staining Procedures and Clinical SignificanceOptometry and Vision Science, 1989
- Protein adsorption on soft contact lensesBiomaterials, 1986
- Analysis of biomaterials deposited on soft contact lensesJournal of Biomedical Materials Research, 1977