## Correct Answer: A. Fluorescein dye - visualized under cobalt blue filter Fluorescein is the gold-standard dye for diagnosing corneal epithelial defects and ulcers in clinical practice across Indian ophthalmology departments. Fluorescein is a water-soluble, lipophilic dye that penetrates denuded corneal epithelium but does NOT stain intact epithelium—this selectivity is the key discriminator. When applied topically (as 2% solution or fluorescein strip), it pools in areas of epithelial loss and appears bright yellow-green. However, the critical technical point is visualization: fluorescein fluoresces maximally under **cobalt blue light** (wavelength ~490 nm excitation, ~520 nm emission). The cobalt blue filter on a slit lamp or hand-held Wood's lamp excites the fluorescein molecule, causing it to emit bright green-yellow fluorescence that stands out sharply against the dark corneal background. This combination—fluorescein dye + cobalt blue filter—is the standard diagnostic protocol taught in Indian medical schools (per AIIMS, CMC Vellore, and other tertiary centers) and is the DOC for screening corneal abrasions, ulcers, and foreign bodies. The fluorescence is immediate, highly sensitive, and allows precise localization of the defect for clinical management and documentation. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Lissamine dye green filter** — Lissamine green (also called lissamine green B) is used to stain the **conjunctiva and mucus** in dry eye disease (Rose Bengal alternative), not corneal epithelial defects. It stains dead/damaged cells but is not the standard for corneal ulcer diagnosis. The green filter is also incorrect—lissamine green requires different light wavelengths and does not fluoresce under standard slit-lamp filters used for corneal examination. **C. Lissamine dye cobalt blue filter** — This combines two incorrect elements: lissamine green is not used for corneal ulcer diagnosis (it is for conjunctival/tear film assessment in dry eye), and lissamine does not fluoresce under cobalt blue light. This option may trap students who confuse lissamine green with fluorescein or who remember that cobalt blue is used in ophthalmology but apply it to the wrong dye. **D. Fluorescein dye - visualized under green filter** — While fluorescein is correct, the filter is wrong. A green filter does not excite fluorescein adequately; cobalt blue light (490 nm) is required for optimal fluorescence. Using a green filter would result in poor visualization and false negatives. This is a classic NBE trap pairing the right dye with the wrong optical filter. ## High-Yield Facts - **Fluorescein + cobalt blue** is the gold standard for diagnosing corneal epithelial defects and ulcers; fluorescein does NOT stain intact epithelium. - **Lissamine green** is used for conjunctival and tear film staining in dry eye disease (Sjögren's, Stevens-Johnson syndrome), not corneal ulcers. - **Cobalt blue light** (490 nm excitation) causes fluorescein to fluoresce bright yellow-green; this is the only filter that provides adequate visualization on slit lamp. - **Rose Bengal** (older alternative to lissamine green) stains dead/damaged conjunctival cells; it is NOT used for corneal ulcer diagnosis. - Fluorescein staining is **immediate and reversible**; it washes out with tears and is safe for repeated use in Indian primary health centers and tertiary eye care. ## Mnemonics **FLU-CO for Corneal Ulcers** **FLU**orescein + **CO**balt blue = Corneal Ulcer diagnosis. Remember: Fluorescein fluoresces (glows) under cobalt blue—the dye and filter must work together. **LISS for Dry Eye, FLUO for Ulcers** **LISS**amine green → dry eye (conjunctiva). **FLUO**rescein → corneal ulcers (epithelial defects). Different dyes for different tissues. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs fluorescein (correct dye) with green filter (wrong filter) in option D to trap students who know fluorescein is used for corneal ulcers but confuse the optical filter. The cobalt blue filter is non-negotiable for fluorescein visualization. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian primary health centers and rural eye camps, fluorescein strips are the most cost-effective and portable tool for screening corneal ulcers in suspected keratitis or trauma cases. A simple hand-held Wood's lamp with cobalt blue filter can confirm the diagnosis at the bedside, guiding urgent referral to tertiary care for management of bacterial or fungal ulcers. _Reference: Parson's Diseases of the Eye (Chapter on Cornea); Harrison Principles of Internal Medicine Ch. 29 (Ophthalmology); AIIMS Ophthalmology teaching protocols on corneal examination_
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