Effects of Oral Antihistamines on Tear Volume, Tear Stability, and Intraocular Pressure

The goal of this study was to investigate the effects of two commonly used oral antihistamines—diphenhydramine and loratadine—on tear volume, tear breakup time, and intraocular pressure. Placebo, diphenhydramine, and loratadine were administered for one week to 33 subjects experimentally blind to th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brian K. Foutch, Kyle A. Sandberg, Edward S. Bennett, Leonard L. Naeger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Vision
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2411-5150/4/2/32
id doaj-6703311df356402c9e5b28e70bd0c6f9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6703311df356402c9e5b28e70bd0c6f92020-11-25T02:59:28ZengMDPI AGVision2411-51502020-06-014323210.3390/vision4020032Effects of Oral Antihistamines on Tear Volume, Tear Stability, and Intraocular PressureBrian K. Foutch0Kyle A. Sandberg1Edward S. Bennett2Leonard L. Naeger3Rosenberg School of Optometry, University of the Incarnate Word, San Antonio, TX 78229, USARosenberg School of Optometry, University of the Incarnate Word, San Antonio, TX 78229, USACollege of Optometry, University of Missouri-St Louis, St. Louis, MO 63121, USACollege of Optometry, University of Missouri-St Louis, St. Louis, MO 63121, USAThe goal of this study was to investigate the effects of two commonly used oral antihistamines—diphenhydramine and loratadine—on tear volume, tear breakup time, and intraocular pressure. Placebo, diphenhydramine, and loratadine were administered for one week to 33 subjects experimentally blind to the treatment given. All the subjects received all three treatments over a period of six weeks. The outcome measures were the change in phenol red thread test (PRT), the tear breakup time (TBUT), and the intraocular pressure (IOP) of both eyes evaluated by experimentally masked observers. Neither of the mean changes in TBUT or IOP depended on the treatment given, but there was a significant monocular decrease in tear volume from diphenhydramine use. While we used an adequate treatment washout period of seven days, our investigation was limited by the short treatment times and inclusion of only young healthy patients. Overall, however, these results suggest that systemic diphenhydramine use should be limited to increase the effectiveness of conventional therapies. Clinicians should have fewer reservations about recommending the use of loratadine concurrent with dry eye treatments.https://www.mdpi.com/2411-5150/4/2/32tear break-up timephenol red thread testintraocular pressureantihistaminediphenhydramineloratadine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brian K. Foutch
Kyle A. Sandberg
Edward S. Bennett
Leonard L. Naeger
spellingShingle Brian K. Foutch
Kyle A. Sandberg
Edward S. Bennett
Leonard L. Naeger
Effects of Oral Antihistamines on Tear Volume, Tear Stability, and Intraocular Pressure
Vision
tear break-up time
phenol red thread test
intraocular pressure
antihistamine
diphenhydramine
loratadine
author_facet Brian K. Foutch
Kyle A. Sandberg
Edward S. Bennett
Leonard L. Naeger
author_sort Brian K. Foutch
title Effects of Oral Antihistamines on Tear Volume, Tear Stability, and Intraocular Pressure
title_short Effects of Oral Antihistamines on Tear Volume, Tear Stability, and Intraocular Pressure
title_full Effects of Oral Antihistamines on Tear Volume, Tear Stability, and Intraocular Pressure
title_fullStr Effects of Oral Antihistamines on Tear Volume, Tear Stability, and Intraocular Pressure
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Oral Antihistamines on Tear Volume, Tear Stability, and Intraocular Pressure
title_sort effects of oral antihistamines on tear volume, tear stability, and intraocular pressure
publisher MDPI AG
series Vision
issn 2411-5150
publishDate 2020-06-01
description The goal of this study was to investigate the effects of two commonly used oral antihistamines—diphenhydramine and loratadine—on tear volume, tear breakup time, and intraocular pressure. Placebo, diphenhydramine, and loratadine were administered for one week to 33 subjects experimentally blind to the treatment given. All the subjects received all three treatments over a period of six weeks. The outcome measures were the change in phenol red thread test (PRT), the tear breakup time (TBUT), and the intraocular pressure (IOP) of both eyes evaluated by experimentally masked observers. Neither of the mean changes in TBUT or IOP depended on the treatment given, but there was a significant monocular decrease in tear volume from diphenhydramine use. While we used an adequate treatment washout period of seven days, our investigation was limited by the short treatment times and inclusion of only young healthy patients. Overall, however, these results suggest that systemic diphenhydramine use should be limited to increase the effectiveness of conventional therapies. Clinicians should have fewer reservations about recommending the use of loratadine concurrent with dry eye treatments.
topic tear break-up time
phenol red thread test
intraocular pressure
antihistamine
diphenhydramine
loratadine
url https://www.mdpi.com/2411-5150/4/2/32
work_keys_str_mv AT briankfoutch effectsoforalantihistaminesontearvolumetearstabilityandintraocularpressure
AT kyleasandberg effectsoforalantihistaminesontearvolumetearstabilityandintraocularpressure
AT edwardsbennett effectsoforalantihistaminesontearvolumetearstabilityandintraocularpressure
AT leonardlnaeger effectsoforalantihistaminesontearvolumetearstabilityandintraocularpressure
_version_ 1724702198673178624