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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Eye pressure after dog cataract surgery with flurbiprofen or bromfenac

By Lu, Jennifer et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2017·Animal Eye Care, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Comparison of topically applied flurbiprofen or bromfenac ophthalmic solution on post-operative ocular hypertension in canine patients following cataract surgery.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs undergoing cataract surgery were treated with either flurbiprofen or bromfenac eye drops to see which worked better at controlling eye pressure after the procedure. Both medications were used alongside a corticosteroid for six weeks, but dogs receiving bromfenac had higher eye pressure shortly after surgery and were more likely to need additional treatment for this issue compared to those receiving flurbiprofen. Overall, while both treatments were effective, flurbiprofen appeared to be safer in terms of managing eye pressure after surgery.

People also search for: dog cataract surgery eye pressure · flurbiprofen vs bromfenac for dogs · post-operative care for dog eye surgery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare the prevalence and kinetics of ocular hypertension after routine cataract extraction when using a predominately COX-2 inhibitor (bromfenac) versus a predominately COX-1 inhibitor (flurbiprofen) in combination with a topical corticosteroid. PROCEDURES: Patients undergoing unilateral or bilateral cataract surgery were randomly assigned to receive flurbiprofen or bromfenac at the day of surgery and continued for 6 weeks postoperatively, along with topical neo poly dexamethasone. No systemic nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medications were administered before or after surgery. Intraocular pressure was monitored pre and postoperatively. When an IOP of >25 mmHg was detected, therapeutic intervention was performed. RESULTS: Eyes in both treatment groups showed a similar IOP profile with the highest mean IOP occurring two hours postsurgery and slowly declining during the next 6 weeks. However, eyes receiving bromfenac had a higher mean IOP at 2 h post-op (22.1 mmHg) than eyes receiving flurbiprofen (18.8 mmHg) and a slower decrease in IOP in the weeks after surgery. Over the course of the study, a higher percentage of eyes receiving bromfenac had therapy discontinued over concerns of elevated IOP compared to eyes receiving flurbiprofen (bromfenac 23.1% and flurbiprofen 9.8%). On average, the risk of having elevated intraocular pressure with bromfenac is 1.04 times higher than with flurbiprofen. CONCLUSION: Elevated postoperative IOP was observed in both treatment groups; however, bromfenac-treated eyes were more likely to require intervention for elevated IOP.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26990912/