## Correct Answer: C. Endothelial cells The corneal endothelium is a single layer of cuboidal cells lining the posterior surface of Descemet's membrane, directly facing the aqueous humor. Its primary function is **active fluid regulation** through the Na⁺-K⁺-ATPase pump, which maintains corneal deturgescence—the state of relative dehydration that preserves corneal transparency. The stroma comprises 90% of corneal thickness and is naturally hydrophilic; without endothelial pump function, stromal edema develops rapidly, causing corneal clouding and loss of vision. The endothelium also maintains the blood-aqueous barrier and regulates aqueous humor composition. In clinical practice, endothelial cell loss (from trauma, surgery, or Fuchs dystrophy) leads to corneal decompensation and edema, necessitating corneal transplantation in India. The endothelial cell density normally decreases with age (~3000 cells/mm² at birth to ~2000 cells/mm² by age 80), and transplant success depends on maintaining adequate endothelial cell count (>2000 cells/mm² for graft survival). This active pump function—not passive barrier properties—is the discriminating feature that makes endothelial cells uniquely responsible for maintaining corneal clarity. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Corneal epithelium** — The epithelium provides a physical barrier against pathogens and foreign bodies, and maintains the tear film interface, but it does NOT regulate stromal hydration. Epithelial defects cause pain and infection, not corneal edema. The epithelium is avascular and relies on diffusion; it lacks the active pump mechanism needed for dehydration. This is a trap for students who confuse 'barrier function' with 'hydration control.' **B. Stroma** — The stroma is the structural scaffold (collagen fibrils arranged in lamellae) that provides corneal strength and refractive power. It is inherently hydrophilic and REQUIRES endothelial regulation to stay dehydrated. The stroma itself cannot pump fluid; it is passively regulated. Stromal edema occurs when endothelial pump fails, not when stroma is dysfunctional. Students may confuse 'largest layer' with 'most important for hydration.' **D. Descemet's membrane** — Descemet's membrane is the basement membrane of the endothelium—a structural support layer composed of collagen IV and laminin. It provides mechanical strength and serves as a barrier, but it is acellular and has NO active transport capability. Descemet's breaks (keratoconus, trauma) cause stromal scarring, not hydration loss. This is a classic NBE trap: confusing a 'barrier membrane' with 'hydration control.' ## High-Yield Facts - **Corneal endothelial Na⁺-K⁺-ATPase pump** actively extrudes fluid from stroma into aqueous humor, maintaining corneal deturgescence and transparency. - **Endothelial cell density** normally ~2000–2500 cells/mm² in adults; density <500 cells/mm² indicates graft failure risk in corneal transplant recipients. - **Fuchs endothelial dystrophy** (most common indication for corneal transplant in India) causes progressive endothelial cell loss, leading to corneal edema and vision loss. - **Corneal edema** develops within hours of endothelial cell loss (>50% cell death); stromal swelling increases corneal thickness and reduces refractive power. - **Specular microscopy** is the gold standard for assessing endothelial cell count and morphology preoperatively in cataract and corneal transplant surgery. ## Mnemonics **PUMP = Posterior Unique Maintenance of Pressure** Endothelium is at the Posterior surface; it has a Unique active pump; it Maintains stromal Pressure (dehydration) to keep cornea Pristine (transparent). Use this when asked 'which layer maintains corneal clarity?' **ENDO = Energy-Dependent Osmotic Regulation** ENDOthelium requires ENergy (ATP) to pump Na⁺-K⁺; this creates osmotic gradient that draws fluid OUT of stroma. Epithelium and Descemet's are passive. Use when distinguishing active vs. passive corneal functions. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs 'corneal transparency' with 'epithelium' to trap students who conflate epithelial health (clear epithelium = clear vision) with hydration control. The epithelium is essential for vision, but endothelium is essential for *maintaining* that clarity by preventing stromal edema. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian corneal transplant practice, a graft fails not because of epithelial or stromal disease, but because endothelial cell count drops below critical threshold (~500 cells/mm²), allowing stromal edema to develop. This is why pre-transplant endothelial cell count assessment is mandatory—it predicts graft survival better than any other single factor. _Reference: Robbins Ch. 29 (Eye); Harrison Ch. 229 (Disorders of Vision); Parson's Diseases of the Eye (Indian standard ophthalmology text)_
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