Repeated Tono-Pen Use Is Safe for Retinal Ganglion Cells: Evidence from Long-Term Rodent Studies
Tono-Pen safety has become a central topic in glaucoma research, especially when studies require repeated intraocular pressure (IOP) measurements in small animals. Because retinal ganglion cell (RGC) survival is usually the primary endpoint in rodent glaucoma and optic nerve injury models, any tonometry-induced retinal damage would seriously confound results. A dedicated study by Cuny and colleagues directly addressed this concern and confirmed that daily Tono-Pen measurements do not affect RGC counts or retinal structure in rats.
Why Tono-Pen Safety Matters in Preclinical Research
Most rodent glaucoma models (episcleral vein cauterization, hypertonic saline, microbead occlusion, laser, etc.) and secondary injury models (optic nerve crush, ischemia-reperfusion) rely on frequent IOP monitoring to validate the model and track progression. Researchers must therefore be certain that the measurement method itself does not cause microtrauma, inflammation, hemorrhage, or accelerated RGC loss.
Key Findings: No Retinal Damage After Two Weeks of Daily Tono-Pen Use
RGC Survival
In a controlled experiment on Lewis rats (n=15), animals receiving daily Tono-Pen measurements for 14 consecutive days showed no reduction in RGC density compared to unmeasured controls (p=0.76). Both central and peripheral retina were unaffected.
Retinal & Ocular Health
Daily fundus exams revealed no intraocular hemorrhage, retinal detachment, disc edema, or inflammatory signs. IOP remained stable throughout the study (14.1–14.3 mmHg), further indicating absence of mechanically induced inflammation.
Technical Reasons the Tono-Pen Is Inherently Safe for Repeated Use
- Works on the Imbert–Fick applanation principle with extremely light corneal touch
- Low sensitivity to central corneal thickness variations
- Fast measurement time (<1 second per reading)
- Excellent tolerance of irregular or edematous corneal surfaces common in injury models
- Extensively validated against gold-standard manometry in rats and mice
Ideal Scenarios for Daily Tono-Pen Monitoring
- Chronic ocular hypertension models
- Optic nerve crush & axonopathy studies
- Retinal ischemia/reperfusion injury
- Autoimmune & inflammatory optic neuritis
- Neuroprotection & drug screening requiring daily IOP curves
Best Practices to Maximize Both Accuracy and Safety
- Always use the same calibrated device and operator
- Measure at the same time each day (circadian control)
- Apply one drop of topical anesthetic (proparacaine)
- Avoid any external pressure on globe or lids
- Use consistent, gentle restraint technique
Following these simple rules ensures both reproducible IOP data and continued confirmation of the outstanding safety profile demonstrated by Cuny et al. and many other laboratories worldwide.