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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Anti-inflammatory pills reduce eye inflammation after fluid test

By Rankin, Amy J et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2013·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Effects of oral administration of anti-inflammatory medications on inhibition of paracentesis-induced blood-aqueous barrier breakdown in clinically normal cats.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 30 healthy domestic shorthair cats were given either prednisolone or meloxicam, two anti-inflammatory medications, to see if they could reduce eye inflammation after a procedure that can cause irritation. The cats received their medication for five days before and after the procedure, and those treated with prednisolone showed less inflammation at 24 and 48 hours afterward. Meloxicam also helped reduce inflammation at the 48-hour mark. This suggests that these medications could be effective for treating eye inflammation in cats, particularly in cases like uveitis.

People also search for: cat eye inflammation treatment · prednisolone for cats · meloxicam for cats eye problems

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess inhibitory effects of orally administered anti-inflammatory medications on paracentesis-induced intraocular inflammation in clinically normal cats. ANIMALS: 30 clinically normal domestic shorthair cats. PROCEDURES: Cats were randomly assigned to a control group and 4 treatment groups. Cats in the treatment groups received an anti-inflammatory medication orally once daily at 7 AM (acetylsalicylic acid [40.5 mg/cat], meloxicam [0.1 mg/kg], prednisone [5 mg/cat], or prednisolone [5 mg/cat]) for 5 days beginning 2 days before paracentesis-induced breakdown of the blood-aqueous barrier (BAB) and continuing until 2 days after paracentesis. Paracentesis of the anterior chamber was performed in 1 randomly selected eye of each cat. Fluorophotometry was performed in both eyes of each cat immediately before (time 0) and 6, 24, and 48 hours after paracentesis. RESULTS: At 24 and 48 hours after paracentesis, fluorescein concentration in the eye subjected to paracentesis in the cats receiving prednisolone was decreased, compared with that in the control cats. At 48 hours, a decrease in the fluorescein concentration was also apparent in the eye subjected to paracentesis in the cats receiving meloxicam, compared with that in the control cats. There was no evidence of treatment effects for acetylsalicylic acid or prednisone. There was no evidence of treatment effects in eyes not subjected to paracentesis. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Orally administered prednisolone and meloxicam significantly decreased intraocular inflammation in clinically normal cats with paracentesis-induced BAB breakdown. Oral administration of prednisolone or meloxicam may be an effective treatment for cats with uveitis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23363352/