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Disease&Treatment/Cornea&Ocular surfaces

Limbal Girdle vogt , type1 & type 2 difference

by eye_doc 2025. 4. 15.

👁 What is Limbal Girdle?

Limbal girdle refers to a white, arc-shaped opacity seen at the peripheral cornea, near the limbus.
It is a common, age-related degeneration, typically asymptomatic.


🔍 Key Features

  • Found in 55% of people aged 40–60
  • Seen in almost 100% of individuals over age 80
  • Typically bilateral and symmetric
  • Most common in the nasal and inferior limbus

 


🧬 Types of Vogt’s Limbal Girdle

🟡 Type I

  • Irregular white band, well-demarcated toward the center
  • A lucid interval (clear zone) separates it from the limbus
  • Calcium deposition in Bowman’s layer, showing “Swiss cheese” holes
  • Considered an early form of band keratopathy

🔵 Type II (True Limbal Girdle)

  • Uniform white band, no lucid interval
  • Irregular central border
  • Associated with elastoid degeneration and elastosis
  • Often found alongside pinguecula

✅ Summary

  • Limbal girdle is a non-progressive, age-related corneal degeneration
  • Type I: Calcium-based, separated by clear zone
  • Type II: Elastin-related, no clear zone, linked with pinguecula
  • Usually requires no treatment

 

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