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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Corneal melting in dogs and cats - can cross-linking help?

By Pot, Simon A et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2014·Equine Department·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Corneal collagen cross-linking as treatment for infectious and noninfectious corneal melting in cats and dogs: results of a prospective, nonrandomized, controlled trial.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs and cats with severe corneal melting (a serious eye condition) were treated with a new therapy called corneal collagen cross-linking (CXL) to see if it could help stabilize their condition. Out of 49 eyes treated, those that received CXL showed less deepening of their ulcers compared to those that only received standard medical treatment. While some eyes still needed additional treatment, most of those that did receive CXL later stabilized. The study suggests that CXL could be a helpful option for pets suffering from this eye problem without causing complications.

People also search for: dog corneal melting treatment · cat eye problems · corneal cross-linking for pets · melting keratitis in dogs · eye ulcer treatment for cats

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: UV-A/Riboflavin cross-linking of corneal collagen fibers (CXL) is a highly promising therapy for corneal melting in humans. A prospective interventional, nonrandomized, controlled study was conducted to compare the stabilizing effect of CXL treatment on melting keratitis in dogs and cats and the complication rate of CXL to those of standardized intensive medical treatment. PROCEDURES: Forty-nine eyes with melting keratitis were included in the study between October 2009 and October 2012. All eyes were treated according to the same medical treatment protocol. Nineteen eyes were CXL-treated, and 30 eyes were not. Follow-up included slit-lamp examination, fluorescein staining, ulcer size measurement, stromal stability evaluation, photographic documentation, and documentation of complications. RESULTS: Five of 19 eyes in the CXL group and 9/30 eyes in the control group required rescue stabilization due to continued melting. Seven of the nine control group corneas stabilized after rescue CXL treatment. At initial presentation, the ulcers in the canine CXL group were significantly deeper and larger than in the control group. Ulcer deepening during follow-up was more pronounced in the canine control group than in the canine CXL group. CXL treatment-related complications were not observed. CONCLUSIONS: Based on the similar failure rates in the control and CXL treatment groups despite the poorer initial situation in the CXL group, the tendency for the ulcers in the control group to deepen and the stabilization of all corneas receiving CXL rescue treatment, we believe that CXL has its place as an adjunctive therapy for melting keratitis in veterinary ophthalmology.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23941330/