Journal of Clinical Medicine (Dec 2022)

Impact of Chronic Kidney Disease on Corneal Neuroimmune Features in Type 2 Diabetes

  • Kofi Asiedu,
  • Maria Markoulli,
  • Shyam Sunder Tummanapalli,
  • Jeremy Chung Bo Chiang,
  • Sultan Alotaibi,
  • Leiao Leon Wang,
  • Roshan Dhanapalaratnam,
  • Natalie Kwai,
  • Ann Poynten,
  • Arun V. Krishnan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12010016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 16

Abstract

Read online

Aim: To determine the impact of chronic kidney disease on corneal nerve measures and dendritic cell counts in type 2 diabetes. Methods: In vivo corneal confocal microscopy images were used to estimate corneal nerve parameters and compared in people with type 2 diabetes with chronic kidney disease (T2DM-CKD) (n = 29) and those with type 2 diabetes without chronic kidney disease (T2DM-no CKD) (n = 29), along with 30 healthy controls. Corneal dendritic cell densities were compared between people with T2DM-CKD and those with T2DM-no CKD. The groups were matched for neuropathy status. Results: There was a significant difference in corneal nerve fiber density (p p = 0.04) between T2DM-CKD and T2DM-no CKD groups. The two diabetes groups had reduced corneal nerve parameters compared to healthy controls (all parameters: p 2, respectively, p 2, respectively, p = 0.02). Additionally, total central dendritic cell density was increased in the T2DM-CKD group compared to T2DM-no CKD group (10.4 (4.3–16.1) and 3.9 (2.1–21.0) cells/mm2, respectively, p = 0.03). Conclusion: The study showed that central corneal dendritic cell density is increased in T2DM-CKD compared to T2DM-no CKD, with groups matched for peripheral neuropathy severity. This is accompanied by a loss of central corneal nerve fibers. The findings raise the possibility of additional local factors exacerbating central corneal nerve injury in people with diabetic chronic kidney disease.

Keywords