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Thank you for visiting nature. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser or turn off compatibility mode in Internet Explorer. In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles and JavaScript. The exact link between systemic and ocular endogenous corticoids steroidome is unclear and whether the ocular steroidome is altered in CSCR eyes is unknown.
The aims of this study were to analyze the human steroidome in the aqueous humor as a function of age, sex and time of the day, to correlate systemic and ocular steroidome and to analyze the ocular steroidome in long lasting complex inactive CSCR.
Based on our results, we present two CSCR cases treated by the combination of oral mineralocorticoid antagonist and glucocorticoids drops. In a cross-sectional study, aqueous humor AH was collected between 8am and 6 pm from 50 unaffected individuals 25 men and 25 women and from 14 patients with chronic CSCR, during cataract surgery.
In addition, simultaneous serum and AH were collected from 27 individuals undergoing cataract surgery and, simultaneous AH and vitreous were collected from 9 patients undergoing cataract and vitrectomy to estimate corticoids levels in the different compartments. The cortisol levels in the serum did not correlate with ocular cortisol levels. The only mineralocorticoids measured in the AH were corticosterone B and its inactive form, the desoxycorticosterone A.
There was no influence of circadian rhythm on cortisol ocular levels and there was no correlation between the age or the sex and the level of F, E, A, and B. Base on this observation, we propose to combine an antagonist of the mineralocorticoid receptor together with topical glucocorticoids in two CSCR patients, resistant to all other treatments, with favorable outcome. Our results indicate that the ocular psteroidome is highly regulated suggesting a local metabolism of ocular corticoids.