Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cat with fluid-filled lumps near both eyes for 7 weeks
By Maggio, Federica·Published in Veterinary Ophthalmology·2020·Tufts Veterinary Emergency Treatments and Specialties Walpole MA USA, United States·View original on Crossref →
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Original publication title: Bilateral temporal dacryops in a cat
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A 1-year-old female spayed Maine Coon cat was brought to the vet because she had pinkish lumps in the corners of both eyes for about seven weeks. The vet found that these lumps were fluid-filled masses in the eye area, which were not painful. After using ultrasound to examine the eyes, the vet performed surgery to remove the masses, which were found to be inflamed tissue from the tear glands. Fortunately, the cat healed well after surgery, and there were no signs of the lumps returning during a follow-up check a year later.
People also search for: cat eye lumps treatment · Maine Coon eye problems · cat tear gland surgery recovery
Abstract
AbstractA 1‐year‐old Maine Coon female spayed cat was presented for a 7‐week history of bilateral pinkish masses located over the dorsotemporal conjunctival quadrants. Ophthalmic examination revealed the presence of bilateral temporal, slightly hyperemic, subconjunctival masses, fluctuant, and nonpainful. The remainder of the ocular examination was unremarkable. Ultrasound biomicroscopy and B‐scan ultrasonography confirmed the presence of a bilateral cavitated and tubular structure, extending within the temporal orbit, with anechoic fluid‐like content. Surgical removal was performed. Histopathology described the lesions as lacrimal gland tissue, markedly infiltrated by inflammatory cells, associated with cavitated structures filled with proteinaceous debris, and lined by flattened bilayered cuboidal epithelial cells. Bilateral adenitis of unknown origin and dacryops of the temporal lacrimal glands were diagnosed. Both surgical sites healed uneventfully, and no recurrence was reported on either eye during a 12‐month follow‐up period.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/vop.12831