Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with eye pigmentation and benign tumor spreading behind eye
By Dees, D Dustin et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2013·Eye Care for Animals, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: An unusual case of ocular melanosis and limbal melanocytoma with benign intraorbital extension in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 6-year-old Golden Retriever was brought in for severe eye problems, including progressive pigmentation in the left eye and a noticeable mass on the right eyelid. After an examination, the vet found a large pigmented mass in the left eye and other pigmented areas in the surrounding tissues. Due to the rapid growth of the tumor, the vet decided to remove the left eye and the mass from the right eyelid. The tests showed that the left eye had a limbal melanocytoma (a type of tumor) and the right eyelid had a conjunctival melanocytoma. This case is unique because it involved both conditions occurring together, and the dog is now recovering after surgery.
People also search for: dog eye problems · Golden Retriever eye tumor · limbal melanocytoma treatment · ocular melanosis in dogs · dog eyelid mass removal
Abstract
This case report describes concurrent ocular melanosis and limbal melanocytoma in a 6-year-old Golden Retriever dog. Three years prior, the pet was examined for progressive corneal pigmentation and started on topical Tacrolimus but was subsequently lost to followup. Current ophthalmic examination revealed a large pigmented limbal mass and severe corneal pigmentation of the left eye as well as a small focal raised pigmented mass of the right third eyelid. Due to extent and rapidity of tumor growth, the left eye was removed via transconjunctival enucleation and submitted for histopathologic examination. At the time of surgery, numerous orbital structures including intraorbital fat, extraocular muscles, and portions of the proximal nasolacrimal drainage apparatus contained multifocal areas of black pigmentation. These tissues were subsequently removed and submitted for microscopic analysis. The pigmented mass of the right third eyelid was also excised. Histopathology of the left eye and orbital contents revealed a limbal melanocytoma extending to the bulbar conjunctiva and orbital space forming a large, markedly necrotic mass. Diffuse, severe ocular melanosis, abnormal stromal pigmentation of the sclera and orbital tissues, and corneal stromal pigmentation were noted. The mass of the right third eyelid was confirmed to be a conjunctival melanocytoma. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first report of concurrent ocular melanosis and limbal melanocytoma with orbital infiltration. The peculiar multifocal distribution of melanocytes throughout ocular connective tissues may explain the development of multiple melanocytic lesions in this patient.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23134502/