Ocular surface microbiota alterations in patients with pterygium
Yiyuan Guo, Gege Tian, Guangzhong Feng, Yong Li, Biying Wang, Jiaxin Wang, Hong Zhang, Yongsheng Hou

TL;DR
This study found that pterygium in the eye is linked to changes in the ocular surface microbiota, possibly due to prolonged electronic device use.
Contribution
The study identifies specific bacterial genera associated with pterygium and links microbiota changes to blue light exposure from electronic devices.
Findings
Alpha diversity was higher in pterygium eyes of patients with prolonged electronic device use.
Pseudomonas increased and Bacteroides decreased in pterygium eyes.
Excessive blue light exposure may be a risk factor for pterygium development.
Abstract
To examine the alterations in the ocular surface microbiota and microbial diversity in patients with pterygium after different durations of electronic device use. This study involved 31 individuals diagnosed with unilateral pterygium. Conjunctival sac swabs were collected from both eyes, and 16S rRNA sequencing was used to identify the species and quantity of bacteria. The microbial composition was annotated and represented through comprehensive bioinformatics analysis. The alpha diversity did not differ significantly between the eyes with pterygium and the contralateral eyes. The Chao1 and Shannon indices for the eyes with pterygium of the patients who used electronic devices for extended periods were significantly higher than those for their contralateral eyes. Principal coordinate analysis revealed that the beta diversity of the eyes with pterygium was similar to that of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCorneal Surgery and Treatments · Ocular Surface and Contact Lens · Ocular Infections and Treatments
