Ophtho3- Equine

  1. Clinical signs of active ERU. (8)
    • pain
    • photophobia
    • blepharoedema
    • miosis
    • aqueous flare
    • keratitic precipitates
    • hypotony
    • chorioretinitis
  2. What are clinical signs of chronic inactive ERU? (8)
    • synechia
    • cataract
    • phthisis bulbi
    • corpora nigra atrophy
    • peripapillary depigmentation ("class butterfly lesion" around the optic nerve)
    • glaucoma
    • retinal detachment
    • blindness
  3. What is the seidel test?
    apply fluorescein dye to eye to identify corneal leakage/ corneal lesions
  4. How do you perform an equine fundic exam?
    • dilate pupil with tropicamide
    • direct microscopy- gives you more magnification, can examine the optic nerve an retinal vessels
    • +/- indirect microscopy- high level screening
  5. How do you take equine IOP?
    • tonovet preferred- no anesthesia required
    • if using tonopen, perform auriculopalpebral nerve block and topical anesthetic
  6. What is the result of retrobulbar block, and when is it used?
    • blocks retraction of globe and elevation of the third eyelid, blocks response to touch and visual stimuli
    • used ophthalmic surgery for standing surgery,as an adjunct to general anesthesia, and to increase conal volume for enucleation
  7. What is the result of the auriculopalpebral nerve block, and when is it used?
    • blocks motor innervation to upper eyelid
    • used to facilitate ophtho exam and when using tonopen to take IOP
  8. What is the result of the supraorbital nerve block, and when is it used?
    • blocks sensory innervation to the upper eyelid
    • used to facilitate ophtho exam
  9. What are risk factors for ERU? (2)
    • Apaloosa
    • seropositive for Lepto pomona
  10. What are etiologies of ERU?
    Immune-mediated: possibly brought on by [primary ocular] corneal ulceration, ocular trauma, lens-induced, primary ocular neoplasia, [systemic] septicemia (foals), viremia, parasitic, secondary neoplasia (LSA), immune-mediated ERU
  11. What are exacerbating factors of ERU? (7)
    • heat cycle
    • deworming
    • vaccination
    • new horse introduced
    • moved to a new barn
    • horse show
    • upper respiratory infection
  12. What are rule outs for equine uveitis? (3)
    glaucoma, ulcer, conjunctivitis (anything that causes red eyes)
  13. What factors affect prognosis of ERU?
    • severity of uveitis, duration of episodes, response to treatment, and frequency of recurrence
    • Increased risk of blindness in apaloosas and horses seropositive for Lepto pomona
  14. What are the treatment recommendations for ERU?
    • Non-specific therapy: topical or systemic corticosteroids/ NSAIDs (prednisone acetate, banamine), bute or aspirin for quiescent phase, atropine, suprachoroidal cyclosporin A (implant sustained release device)
    • new technology- sustained release cyclosporin A intravitreal or subconjunctival
    • Surgical: complete vitrectomy in Germany (in Lepto + patients)
  15. What are sequelae of ERU? (6)
    synechiae, glaucoma, cataracts, retinal detachment, phthisis bulbi, blindness
  16. What is the most common cause of equine glaucoma?
    secondary to anterior uveitis, especially associated with ERU
  17. What are medical and surgical therapies for equine glaucoma?
    • Medical: timolol maleate (beta-blocker- decreases aqueous production), dorzolamide (topical CAI- decreases aqueous production)
    • Surgical: acute cyclophotocoagulation (reduce aqueous production); chronic evisceration/ prosthesis or enucleation
  18. What is unique about the equine fundus?
    paurangiotic retina (partially vascularized)- 30-60 small retinal vessels around the optic disc and the rest is avascular and suppled by the underlying choroidal vessels
  19. Describe uveitis in foals.
    • usually associated with neonatal septicemia and is sterile
    • copious amounts of fibrin common
    • intracameral tissue plasminogen activator used to clear fibrin
  20. Describe glaucoma in horses and how it is different from dogs.
    • glaucoma in the horse tends to cycle; pressures go up and go down; if the client calls you and you do get to the farm for 1-2 days, the signs may not be there anymore
    • almost all glaucoma in horses is reversible; horses have more elasticity to the sclera, so when pressures go down, they eye goes back to normal size
    • even with chronic glaucoma, horses rarely go blind from glaucoma
  21. Differentiate band keratopathy and corneal striae.
    • band keratopathy is an idiopathic incidental finding
    • cracks in descemets membrane (striae) from glaucoma are accompanied by other signs of glaucoma; they also exhibit more branching
    • if you see a line across a horse’s cornea on a pre-purchase exam, take the horse’s pressures and look for signs of glaucoma and ERU
  22. Horse experienced trauma to the eye; how do you determine whether or not to fix (versus enucleate)?
    • is there a dazzle reflex
    • is there consensual PLR
    • what does ocular US look like
  23. What is the most common cause of cataracts in horses?
    • #1 is ERU
    • hereditary in foals
    • sometimes traumatic
  24. How are juvenile cataracts handled clinically?
    • surgery prior to 6 months; consider desired purpose of horse
    • don't breed these animals
  25. What are causes of optic nerve degeneration/ atrophy? (5)
    • glaucoma
    • inflammation
    • trauma
    • ischemia
    • compression
Author
Mawad
ID
326080
Card Set
Ophtho3- Equine
Description
vetmed ophtho3
Updated