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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Accuracy of new handheld eye pressure meters in dogs compared

By Görig, Christiane et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2006·Department of Clinical Sciences of Companion Animals, Netherlands·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Comparison of the use of new handheld tonometers and established applanation tonometers in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study looked at how well new handheld devices for measuring eye pressure in dogs work compared to traditional methods. The researchers found that one of the new devices, called the portable pneumatonometer, often gave lower readings than the standard method, especially when the eye pressure was higher. However, another new device, the induction-impact tonometer, provided accurate and consistent measurements, making it a good option for checking eye pressure in dogs, especially those with glaucoma. Overall, the induction-impact tonometer could be a better choice for vets when assessing eye health in dogs.

People also search for: dog eye pressure measurement · glaucoma treatment in dogs · handheld tonometer for dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine the practical aspects, accuracy, and reproducibility of 2 new automatic handheld tonometers in dogs and compare them with results for 2 established applanation tonometers. ANIMALS: 15 freshly enucleated canine eyes for manometric evaluation and 20 conscious research dogs, 20 client-owned dogs, and 12 dogs with acute glaucoma for clinical tonometry. PROCEDURE: Calibration curves were determined for all 4 tonometers on 15 enucleated canine eyes. Intraocular pressure (IOP) was measured with each tonometer consecutively in conscious dogs, with the MacKay-Marg applanation tonometer as the reference device. Measurements were repeated in 20 sedated dogs. An induction-impact tonometer was evaluated clinically on dogs with acute glaucoma. Additionally, measurements obtained by an experienced and an inexperienced examiner and with or without use of topical anesthesia were compared. RESULTS: The portable pneumatonometer was cumbersome and time-consuming. Compared with results for the reference applanation tonometer, and confirmed by manometry, the portable pneumatonometer increasingly underestimated actual IOP values with increasing IOP. The induction-impact tonometer provided accurate and reproducible measurement values. There was a significant strong correlation between the IOP values obtained by the 2 examiners (r2, 0.82) and also with or without topical anesthesia (r2, 0.86). In dogs with glaucoma, the fitted line comparing values for the reference applanation tonometer and induction-impact tonometer closely resembled an ideal 1:1 relationship. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Use of the portable pneumatonometer in dogs appears to have disadvantages. The induction-impact tonometer appears to provide a promising alternative to the use of applanation tonometers in dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16426223/