Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Filly with eye mass and glaucoma - what to know
By Pereira, Regina et al.·Published in Veterinary medicine and science·2024·Pool House Equine Hospital, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Extensive intraocular melanoma with secondary glaucoma in a 15-month-old Thoroughbred filly.
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A 15-month-old grey Thoroughbred filly was brought in for a 6-week history of swelling and discomfort in her right eye. After a thorough eye exam, the vet found that she had glaucoma caused by a mass in her eye. The mass was identified as an intraocular melanoma, a type of eye cancer, and the filly underwent surgery to remove her eye. Following the surgery, the swelling in her eye decreased, and the diagnosis was confirmed through lab tests.
People also search for: horse eye swelling treatment · Thoroughbred filly glaucoma · intraocular melanoma in horses
Abstract
A 15-month-old, grey, Thoroughbred filly presented for investigation of a 6-week history of corneal oedema and blepharospasm on the right eye (OD). The filly was otherwise healthy. Following ophthalmic examination, glaucoma on the OD was diagnosed. A space occupying mass within the anterior chamber was documented on transpalpebral ultrasonographic examination. This mass obliterated most of the anterior intraocular structures on the peripheral nasal side (corneal endothelium and drainage angle), leading to secondary glaucoma. After systemic and topical treatment addressing secondary glaucoma, the corneal oedema reduced. The mass was visualised as an irregularly rounded brown structure associated with the iris on the peripheral nasal side of the anterior chamber. Given the filly's signalment, location and appearance of the mass, a tentative diagnosis of intraocular melanoma was made and enucleation was performed. Histopathological evaluation of the globe revealed solid sheets of heavily pigmented melanocytic cells, disrupting the normal ciliary body architecture and extending into the iris and subretinal. The cells were pleomorphic, polyhedral to round with occasional spindle-shaped cells, and contained moderate to large amounts of granular black-brown pigment (melanin). The iridal component expanded into the anterior chamber, with cells directly opposed to Descemet's membrane, with loss of the endothelium and expanding and occluding the filtration angle in this area. The lesion infiltrated locally into the edge of the sclera, but did not extend through the sclera, though occasional perivascular clusters of melanophages were observed within the scleral stroma adjacent to the optic nerve. Diagnosis of a uveal melanocytic neoplasm was confirmed, with characteristics similar to only one reported case . This is a unique case of a rapidly growing, invasive, uveal melanoma in a young horse. Intraocular melanoma should be considered as a differential diagnoses for glaucoma in grey horses, regardless of the age and absence of melanocytic skin lesions.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38739097/