University of Wollongong
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Intersubject and interday variability in human tear and meibum lipidomes: a pilot study

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posted on 2024-11-16, 06:58 authored by Simon BrownSimon Brown, Carolina M E Kunnen, Eric B Papas, Percy Lazon de la Jara, Mark D P Willcox, Stephen Blanksby, Todd MitchellTodd Mitchell
Purpose Our aim was to quantitate day-to-day changes in the tear and meibum lipid profile of individual subjects in a pilot study of healthy humans. Methods Matched tear and meibum samples were obtained from four subjects on three consecutive days. Quantitative lipid profiles of human basal tears and meibum were compared using multivariate analysis by principal components. Results Substantial differences in the lipid profile between subjects were observed, while lipid profiles were steady across the three consecutive days of sampling. Multivariate principal component analysis demonstrated that lysophosphatidylcholine was the largest variant lipid class between subjects in tears, while wax esters comprised the most variation between subjects in meibum secretions. Conclusion Interday variability is shown to be much smaller than interpatient variability, suggesting that tears and meibum subjects both have unique profiles in humans.

Funding

Identifying tear lipids, their deposition onto contact lenses and their role in the development of dry eye

Australian Research Council

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Lipidomics of vision

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Brown, S. H. J., Kunnen, C. M. E., Papas, E. B., Lazon de la Jara, P., Willcox, M. D. P., Blanksby, S. J. & Mitchell, T. W. (2016). Intersubject and interday variability in human tear and meibum lipidomes: a pilot study. The Ocular Surface, 14 (1), 43-48.

Journal title

Ocular Surface

Volume

14

Issue

1

Pagination

43-48

Language

English

RIS ID

104608

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