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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

New surgical method to treat cloudy corneas in dogs with eye cell

By Giannikaki, Stamatina et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2020·Optivet Referrals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A modified technique of keratoleptynsis ("letter-box") for treatment of canine corneal edema associated with endothelial dysfunction.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 44 dogs with corneal swelling and discomfort underwent a specialized eye surgery to improve their vision and relieve pain. After the procedure, all dogs felt better within about 35 days, and most retained their vision for two years, with only two dogs losing sight. The surgery successfully reduced the thickness of the cornea over time, helping to maintain a clear central area in the eye. Overall, the dogs showed significant improvement in comfort and corneal health after the treatment.

People also search for: dog corneal edema treatment · dog eye surgery recovery · canine corneal swelling symptoms

Abstract

PURPOSE: To describe a modified keratoleptynsis procedure, as a method of preserving central corneal function, and evaluate the outcome in vision, reduction of corneal thickness and treatment of epithelial corneal ulcers in cases with endothelial cell dysfunction. METHODS: Forty-four dogs (72 eyes) were affected by progressive corneal edema, with or without ulcerative keratitis. All patients were treated with a dorsal and ventral superficial keratectomy followed by conjunctival flaps, maintaining a clear central cornea. Corneal thickness measurements were obtained via ultrasound biomicroscopy. RESULTS: All eyes showed resolution of ocular discomfort postoperatively, with a median time to resolution of 35 days. Two years post-surgery, vision had been lost in 2 of 29 eyes (7%). From the initial population, 23 dogs (39 eyes) had follow-up evaluations of corneal thickness. The mean central corneal thickness was 1359 ± 251 μm prior to surgery. Thickening of the central cornea was observed one week after surgery to 1559 ± 263 μm. Decreased corneal thickness was reported, at 1 month, 4 months, 10 months and 2 years postoperatively (1285 ± 267 μm, 1102 ± 150 μm, 1121 ± 288 μm, 1193 ± 283 μm, respectively). All eyes showed a similar trend of increasing and then decreasing corneal thickness. CONCLUSIONS: This surgical technique provided statistically significant reduction in central corneal thickness and sustained relief of ocular pain. Reduction in corneal thickness appeared to be maintained 2 years post-surgery, and all patients remained comfortable. Superficial corneal pigmentation and fibrosis resulted in vision loss in two eyes.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32893460/