Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Safe 24-hour eye pressure testing in dogs with glaucoma
By Sanchez, R F et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2017·Queen Mother Hospital for Animals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Design of an intraocular pressure curve protocol for use in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with glaucoma had their eye pressure measured to find a safe way to monitor for dangerous increases outside of regular vet hours. Three different methods were tested, and the one that used rebound tonometry every three hours for 30 hours proved to be the safest, with no corneal ulcers developing. This method successfully detected high eye pressure in many dogs that would have been missed with just a single measurement during office hours. Overall, this approach can help veterinarians better manage glaucoma in dogs by identifying issues sooner.
People also search for: dog glaucoma treatment · how to check dog eye pressure · rebound tonometry for dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To establish an intraocular pressure curve protocol that is safe for corneal health and detects harmful elevations of intraocular pressure outside normal clinic hours. To determine inter-user variability and if repeated measurements affect intraocular pressures. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Intraocular pressures were measured in dogs with glaucoma using three protocols: Protocol 1 used applanation tonometry every 2 hours over a 24-hour period; Protocols 2 and 3 used applanation or rebound tonometry, respectively, and measured intraocular pressures every 3 hours over a 30-hour period. A total of 60 additional intraocular pressure curves from dogs with glaucoma and 20 from healthy dogs were then analysed for inter-user variability. RESULTS: A total of 128 intraocular pressure curves were determined in 30 dogs. Protocol 1 resulted in one ulcer in five pressure curves, Protocol 2 in one ulcer in 62 pressure curves and Protocol 3 in no ulcers in 61 pressure curves. Elevated intraocular pressures were detected on 61 occasions, of which 26 developed outside normal clinic hours. A total of 61 additional intraocular pressure curves revealed that repeated measurements had no effect on intraocular pressure. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Protocol 3, using rebound tonometry every 3 hours for 30 hours is safe corneal health and identified elevated intraocular pressures outside normal clinic hours in 12 of 30 (40%) patients that single intraocular pressure measurement during consultation hours would not have identified. Intraocular pressure curves may be recommended for clinical practice and glaucoma studies.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27861904/