Ophtho3- Equine Cornea

  1. What are some unique characteristics of the equine cornea? (4)
    • slower to heal
    • more likely to become infected
    • more likely to melt
    • more likely to lose vision
  2. What are limitations of using topical steroids in the equine eye? (6)
    • contraindicated in corneal ulceration
    • increased risk of infection, esp fungal
    • impair ocular surface immune response
    • delay epithelialization
    • potentiate collagenase (potentiate melting)
    • delay vascularization (vessels help with healing)
  3. Signs of ulcerative keratitis. (8)
    • lacrimation
    • blepharospasm (pain)
    • blepharedema 
    • Photophobia (pain)
    • conjunctival hyperemia/ chemosis
    • corneal edema
    • miosis
    • aqueous flare
  4. Causes of equine corneal ulcers. (7)
    • trauma
    • foreign body
    • eosinophilic keratitis
    • equine herpesvirus-2
    • immune-mediated
    • indolent ulcer
    • exposure keratitis
  5. Describe the use of antibiotics in treatment of equine corneal ulcers. (4 principals)
    • broad-spectrum antibiotics that DO NOT penetrate intact epithelium: Neo-poly-bac- triple antibiotic, Oxytet-polyB- terrmycin, anti-collagenase, promotes epithelialization
    • broad-spectrum antibiotics that DO penetrate intact epithelium: chloramphenicol, fluoroquiniolones- cipro, levoflox, ofolx
    • Given every 2-6hours
    • Gentamicin is a poor choice!!!!!!
  6. Describe the use of atropine in treating equine corneal ulcers.
    as needed to dilate the pupil, but NOT more than 2x a day (can induce ileus and colic)
  7. Why is it important to treat pain associated with corneal ulcers, and what do we use?
    • a horse with a painful eye is going to be more difficult to treat
    • use systemic NSAIDs- flunixine, firocoxib, bute
    • maybe topical NSAIDs- diclofenac
  8. How do we achieve anti-collagenase therapy? (3)
    • equine serum
    • topical tetracycline
    • systemic doxycycline
  9. When is surgery indicated for treatment of corneal ulcers? (3)
    • refractory to medical therapy
    • progressive depth and/ or diameter
    • deep or perforated ulcers
  10. When is a corneal ulcer classified as "complicated"? (6)
    • slow to heal
    • stromal loss/ collagenase activity
    • secondary infection
    • corneal vascularization
    • worsening despite treatment
    • caused by severe trauma
  11. Describe superficial corneal ulcers. (3)
    • typically very painful
    • heal within 3-7 days if cause is removed
    • fluoroscein positive
  12. Describe the routine treatment of superficial corneal ulcers. (4)
    • broad spectrum topical antibiotics every 6 hours (neo-poly-bac or oxytet-polyB)
    • atropine every 12-72 hours
    • systemic NSAIDs
    • recheck in 3-5 days
  13. How do you handle a superficial ulcer that is complicated/ not healing? (3)
    • look for inciting cause
    • culture/ susceptibility
    • alter therapy accordingly
  14. What are signs of corneal infection? (7)
    • cellular infiltrate
    • marked hyperemia/ chemosis
    • increased pain
    • anterior uveitis (miosis, flare, hypopyon)
    • progressive edema, size, and/ or depth (collagenase)
    • corneal vascularization
    • non-responsive to medical therapy
  15. When is healing expected with an infected superficial corneal ulcer?
    14-21 days
  16. Describe mid-stromal corneal ulcers. (5)
    • can see depth/ "crater" (this indicated collagenase activity)
    • fluoroscein positive
    • usually associated with infection--> always do cytology and culture!
    • increased corneal edema
    • increased instances of uveitis
  17. Describe medical management of stromal ulcers. (3)
    • initial therapy same as superficial ulcer (if <50% depth)
    • fluoroquinolones if refractory
    • tetracycline and/ or serum for anti-collagenase
  18. How long does it take stromal ulcers to heal?
    2-8 weeks
  19. Surgery is indicated for stromal ulcers if...
    • ulcer >50% depth
    • progressive depth or size, even with medical management
    • --> keratectomy and conj graft
  20. What organisms are usually implicated in melting corneal ulcers? (2)
    • Pseudomonas aeruginosa
    • beta-hemolytic strep
  21. What diagnostics are imperative with melting corneal ulcers? (2)
    • cytology
    • culture
  22. What is the treatment for melting corneal ulcers? (6)
    • topical antibiotics every 2-4 hours (fluoroquinolones)
    • autogenous serum every 2-4 hours
    • tetracycline topical every 4-8 hours
    • oral doxycycline every 12-24 hours
    • [choose one anti-collagenase therapy]
    • surgery usually indicated- debride melting portion, conj graft
  23. Describe the clinical appearance of a desmetocele. (3)
    • stromal edema with a crater in the cornea- clear descemets membrane
    • donut fluoroscein stain (descemets membrane does not stain, but surrounding stroma does)
    • EMERGENCY- perforation is imminent
  24. How is a desmetocele treated? (3)
    • emergency surgery- conj graft, corneoscleral transposition, corneal transplant
    • topical antibiotics only
    • systemic NSAIDs
  25. Describe the clinical appearance of a ruptured corneal ulcer. (5)
    • deep defect surrounding a protruding area of clotted aqueous or uveal prolapse
    • shallow anterior chamber
    • dyscoria
    • visible leaking aqueous
    • siedel test (fluroscein stain on eye- either enters the anterior chamber or can see aqueous leaking in stained area)
  26. What are factors of poor prognosis with corneal perforation/ laceration? (6)
    • blunt trauma
    • significant hyphema
    • laceration >15mm
    • lens is perforated
    • if a large uveal prolapse through the incision is present
    • no consenual PLR or dazzle
  27. ** __________ lacerations have better prognosis than ___________ lacerations due to... (2)
    • Axial; limbal
    • less daage to uvea and further distance from lens.
  28. When is US required with corneal laceration?
    if vitreous and retina cannot be visualized
  29. Consider enucleation with corneal laceration if... (3)
    • no consensual PLR
    • large uveal prolapse present
    • US shows significant blood in vitreous or retinal detachment
  30. What are risk factors for fungal keratitis? (4)
    • chronic corneal ulcers
    • topical corticosteroid use
    • dirty environment
    • more common in summer months (humidity)
  31. What is the clinical appearance with fungal keratitis? (2)
    • multifocal areas of cellular infiltrate and colonies of fungal organisms- white lesions, deep in corneal stroma
    • usually severe pain and uveitis
  32. Describe the treatment of fungal keratitis. (4)
    • topical antifungals- natamycin (not used much b/c suspension, expensive)
    • imidazole antibiotics- miconazole (only if ulcerative), itraconazole (with DMSO), voriconazole (topical); voriconazole penetrates intact epithelium (best option); fluconazole orally (if abscess)
    • +/- surgical debridement
    • +/- conj graft
  33. How does corneal stromal abscess occur?
    • superficial corneal ulcer allows opportunistic infection
    • ulcer heals, trapping microorganism inside the stroma
  34. How do corneal stromal abscesses appear clinically? (6)
    • yellow-white corneal stromal infiltrate
    • corneal edema
    • deep corneal vascularization
    • pain
    • anterior uveitis
    • negative fluoroscein
  35. What topical antibiotic is used for corneal stromal abscessation?
    ciprofloxacin (flurorquinolones are the only antibiotic that penetrate intact epithelium)
  36. What topical antifungal can penetrate intact corneal epithelium to treat a stromal abscess?
    voriconazole
  37. Describe the treatment of corneal stromal abscessation. (5)
    • fluoroquinolone or chloramphenicol topically
    • manage secondary uveitis
    • topical or oral antifungals (voriconazole topical)
    • keratctomy
    • conj graft
  38. What 2 fungi are most common implicated in corneal abscesses?
    • aspergillus
    • fusarium
  39. What are signs of indolent ulcers? (7)
    • superficial
    • mildly painful or non-painful
    • loose or redundant epithelium borders
    • no cellular infiltrate
    • slow to vascularize
    • middle-aged to older horses
    • metabolic syndrome
  40. Describe indolent ulcer management. (4)
    • rule out infection!!!! with culture and cytology
    • debride loose epithelium
    • diamond burr debridement preferred (can do grid keratotomy)
    • oxytet topically
  41. Describe eosinophilic keratitis. (5)
    • eosinophilic infiltration of the cornea
    • ulcerative or non-ulcerative
    • vessels coming from limbus
    • pink to white infiltrate in the cornea
    • most common in summer months
    • diagnosed by clinical signs and cytology
  42. What are clinical signs of eosinophilic keratitis? (4)
    • conj hyperemia
    • peripheral corneal vascularization and caseous infiltrate (white, pink, yellow)
    • +/- blepharospasm
    • +/- ulceration
  43. What is the treatment for eosinophilic keratitis? (2)
    • routine ulcer therapy if ulcer
    • topical alomide (mast cell stabilizer)- takes 3-4 weeks of treatment, may take months to resolve
  44. Describe immune-mediated keratitis. (6 principals)
    • typically non-painful
    • usually non-ulcerative
    • corneal vascularization
    • white to yellow stromal infiltrate
    • slowly progressive
    • epithelial, stromal and endothelial forms- characterized by depth of cornea that it affects
  45. How is immune-mediated keratitis diagnosed?
    • diagnosis of exclusion
    • rule out bacterial and fungal keratitis
    • rule out EHV-2 with anti-viral treatment
    • rule out atypical invasive corneal SCC
  46. How is immune-kediated keratitis managed?
    • many options- different horses respond to different immunomodulatory drugs
    • topical cyclosporine or tacrolimus
    • topical corticosteroid (rule out infection and ulcer first!)
    • oral doxycycline
  47. What are causes of corneal infiltrates? (4)
    • infectious
    • scar/ fibrosis
    • cellular- neoplasia, inflammatory
    • non-cellular- mineral/ calcium, lipid
Author
Mawad
ID
326505
Card Set
Ophtho3- Equine Cornea
Description
vetmed ophtho3
Updated