Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Herpesvirus linked to eye infections in great horned owls
By Gleeson, Molly D et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2019·School of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A novel herpesvirus associated with chronic superficial keratitis and proliferative conjunctivitis in a great horned owl (Bubo virginianus).
Plain-English summary
A great horned owl was brought in with a recurring eye problem, specifically corneal ulcers and conjunctivitis (inflammation of the eye lining). Despite initial treatments not working, the owl's condition improved significantly after a procedure to clean the eye and the use of antiviral medications. A new herpesvirus was identified as the cause of the eye issues, which helped the veterinarians choose the right treatment. After the appropriate care, the owl's eye healed well, and the conjunctivitis improved dramatically.
People also search for: great horned owl eye problems · owl conjunctivitis treatment · herpesvirus in birds
Abstract
An adult great-horned owl (Bubo virginianus; GHOW) presented with a history of recurrent corneal ulceration of the right eye (OD). Findings included ulcerative superficial keratitis, proliferative conjunctivitis, and iris pigmentary changes. The ulcer was initially nonresponsive to medical therapy, but showed rapid and appropriate healing following diamond burr debridement. Proliferative conjunctivitis markedly improved following topical antiviral therapy with cidofovir 1%, interferon alpha 2B ophthalmic solutions, and oral l-lysine. Histopathologic evaluation of a conjunctival biopsy revealed epithelial features suspicious for viral cytopathic changes and intranuclear structures suspicious for viral inclusions, suggestive of a possible viral-induced papillomatous conjunctivitis. A novel alphaherpesvirus, referred to as Strigid Herpesvirus 1 (StrHV1), was identified using PCR and gene sequencing. This case represents a new clinical manifestation of a previously unreported herpesvirus in the GHOW. Identification of the herpes virus was critical to administration of appropriate therapy and resolution of the conjunctivitis, and corneal epithelial debridement promoted resolution of the chronic corneal epithelial defect.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29656541/