-
What is the purpose of the orbit?
protect the globe and it's associated structures
-
What are the major differences between herbivores and carnivores in their orbit? (5)
- Herbivores: closed orbit, laterally-oriented, wider binocular field, smaller total visual field
- Carnivores: open orbit- temporal orbital rim is comprised of orbital ligament, forward-oriented, smaller binocular field, wider total visual field, small blind spot to rear
-
What are the contents of the orbit? (7)
globe, neurovascular bundle, fat, glands, extraocular muscles, fascia and periorbita
-
Where is the orbital fat located? What is its function?
- b/w the periorbita and orbital wall
- provides cushion to protect the globe from shock and trauma
-
What glands are located within the orbit? (4)
- lacrimal gland dorsally
- GNM ventromedially
- Harderian gland (cows, pigs, rabbits) at the base of the third eyelid
- zygomatic salivary gland fills the ventral floor of the orbit
-
What structure makes up the floor of the orbit?
zygomatic salivary gland
-
What is the function of the retractor bulbi muscle? What is its innervation?
- retracts globe, only in animals (not birds)
- CN VI (abducens nerve)
-
What are the functions of the oblique muscles? What are the innervations of these muscles?
- dorsal oblique- dorsomedial movement of globe; CN IV (trochlear nerve)
- ventral oblique- ventrolateral movement of globe; CN III (oculomotor nerve)
-
All the orbital muscles arise from the ___________, except the __________.
orbital apex; ventral oblique (arises from the medial orbital wall)
-
What are the functions of the rectus muscles? What are the innervations of these muscles?
- [dorsal, ventral, medial, lateral] function antagonistically with opposing rectus muscles
- CN III (oculomotor nerve) for dorsal, ventral, and medial
- CN VI (abducens nerve) for lateral
-
What are clinical signs of orbital diseease? (7)
- exophthalmos
- enophthalmos
- periocular swelling
- globe deviation
- elevation of the NM
- reduced retropulsion
- +/- pain on opening the mouth
-
Exophthalmos is caused by the globe being....
Etiologies include... (5)
- displaced rostrally within the orbit
- orbital neoplasia, orbital hemorrhage (trauma, coagulopathy), orbital cellulitis/ abscess, orbital mucocele (zygomatic salivary gland), myositis
-
Exophthalmos must be differentiated from ___________ by... (4)
buphthalmos (enlargement of the globe d/t chronic glaucoma); compare corneal diameters, retropulse both globes, skyline view for globe prominence beyond orbital rim, elevated third eyelid sometimes with exophthalmos and never with buphthalmos
-
What are diagnostic modalities for evaluating exophthalmos? (5)
- skull radiographs (least sensitive)
- CT scan (ideal for detecting bony changes)
- MRI (superior for soft tissue)
- ocular US (sensitive but not specific, neoplastic masses indent globe, inflammatory masses conform to globe)
- surgical exploratory (invasive)
-
How can onset of exophthalmos help lead you to top differentials?
- Acute- inflammatory
- Chronic- neoplasia
-
What etiologies cause bilateral exophthalmos? Unilateral?
- Bilateral: systemic disease, myositis
- Unilateral: cellulitis, abscess, neoplasia
-
Exophthalmos with pain is usually caused by ____________; non-painful is usually associated with ____________.
inflammatory causes; neoplasia
-
Enophthalmos must be differentiated from... (2)
- microphthalmos: congenitally small globe
- phthisis bulbi: shrunken globe without vision associated with chronic intraocular disease
-
What are causes of enophthalmos? (6)
- dehydration
- cachexia
- atrophy of orbital fat (senile change, trauma)
- atrophy of retro-orbital muscles (myositis, denervation)
- secondary to ocular pain
- Horner's syndrome (b/c extraocular muscle cone is surrounded by muscle that has sympathetic innervation)
-
Unilateral enophthalmos suggests __(3)__; bilateral suggests __(3)__.
- Unilateral: neoplasia, post-traumatic orbital fat atrophy, ocular pain
- Bilateral: [systemic disease] dehydration, cachexia, muscle atrophy
-
Cellulitis/ abscesses of the orbit can be caused by... (3)
- migrating FB- direct penetrating of orbit via soft palate
- hemtogenous spread from systemic infection
- extensions from adjacent periorbital inflammation or infection (tooth root abscess, sinusitis, zygomatic sialoadenitis)
-
What are clinical signs of orbital cellulitis/ abscess? (7)
- acute onset
- pain when you open the mouth
- unilateral elevation of the NM
- exophthalmos
- periocular swelling
- fever, leukocytosis
- +/- swelling behind last upper molar
-
Why does orbital cellulitis/ abscess cause pain on opening the mouth?
- globe in close proximity with ramus of mandible
- opening the mouth changes the position of the ramus and compresses the orbital soft tissue structures
-
How do you treat orbital cellulitis/ abscess? (5)
- broad-spectrum oral antibiotics
- NSAIDs or steroids
- lubricate cornea
- remove nidus of infection (tooth root abscess, etc)
- [not recommended] surgical drainage--> only if severe swelling behind molar
-
What is eosinophilic myositis?
- aka masticatory muscle myositis, polymyositis
- acute swelling of the muscles of mastication
-
What are clinical signs of eosinophilic myositis? (4)
- exophthalmos
- swollen, firm muscles of mastication
- trismus (cannot open the mouth)
- +/- vision loss (d/t compression of the optic nerve by inflammed extraocular muscles)
-
How is eosinophilic myositis diagnosed? (5)
- auto-antibodies to 2M muscle fibers (serum or muscle biopsy sample)
- muscle biopsy
- suggestive labwork: leukocytosis, eosinophilia, increased CK
-
How is eosinophilic myositis treated?
- prednisone 0.5mg/kg PO BID for 2-4 weeks (tapered dose)
- may recur when therapy stopped
-
What is extraocular polymyositis?
- acute, bilateral immune-mediated swelling, limited to the extraocular muscles
- no autoantibodies identified yet
- young golden retrievers
-
How is extraocular polymyositis diagnosed and treated?
- signalement and presentation
- +/- MRI, ocular US
- treatment and prognosis is the same as eosinophilic myositis (immune suppression)
-
What are clinical signs with orbital neoplasia? (7)
- unilateral
- non-painful exophthalmos
- enophthalmos in cats with orbital bony lysis
- slowly progressive
- non-responsive to antibiotics
- +/- vision loss
- posterior globe may be indented on imaging
-
Most common causes of orbital neoplasia in dogs, cats, horses, and cows?
- Dogs: usually primary ocular neoplasia, usually malignant
- Cats: usually secondary neoplasia, usually malignant
- Horses: usually secondary neoplasia (SCC most common), almost always malignant
- Cows: lymphoma, SCC most common
-
What neoplasia can appear in the orbit in cats and dogs? (6)
- osteosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, meningioma, adenocarcinoma
- SCC
- lymphoma
- mast cell tumors
-
What are treatment options for orbital neoplasia?
- surgery- exteneration
- chemotherapy
- radiation
- based on histopath diagnosis
-
What is the prognosis of orbital neoplasia?
- Grave- most are malignant!
- Except: SCC in cows and horses, exteneration may be curative is resection is complete and no metastatic disease
-
What are clinical features of proptosis of the globe?
- common in brachycephalic dogs
- minimal trauma required for brachys
- severe trauma required for cats and other breeds of dogs
- make sure you address other injuries with trauma!
-
What are clinical signs of proptosis? (6)
- acute exophthalmos with eyelid entrapment behind the globe
- severe chemosis
- subconjunctival hemorrhage
- blindness
- keratitis/ corneal ulcer
- hyphema
-
Which muscle is most likely to rupture with proptosis of the eye and why?
medial rectus muscle b/c it is the shortest muscle
-
What are positive prognostic indicators with proptosis of the globe? (7)
- less than 2 extraocular muscles avulsed (look at position of globe to assess this)
- no lacerations or corneal disease
- peracute onset
- positive menace reflex
- pupil mid-sized or miotic
- consensual PLR present
- normal intra-ocular pressure
-
What are poor prognostic indicators with a proptosed globe? (7)
- mydriatic and non-responsive pupil
- absence of consensual PLR
- more than 2 extraocular muscles avulsed
- transection of the optic nerve
- corneal sclera laceration
- very low IOP
- hyphema
-
What is treatment of a proptosed globe?
- to replace or not to replace? most end up blind so let owner's decide if they want to pay twice (will probably need to be removed later anyway)
- tarsorrhaphy
- +/- lateral canthotomy
- warm compresses
- systemic broad-spectrum antibiotics
- topical antibiotics
- anti-inflammatories
- e-collar
- soft food
- NO STEROIDS
-
What are sequelae to proptosis? (5)
- lateral or dorsolateral strabismus
- neutrophilic keratitis
- lagophthalmos
- KCS
- phthisis bulbi
|
|