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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Eye infection linked to umbilical infection in a Japanese black calf

By Sato, Reiichiro et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2025·Graduate School of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Infectious endophthalmitis associated with umbilical infection in Japanese black calf: a case report.

Species:
cattle

Plain-English summary

A 3-day-old Japanese black calf was brought in with a swollen umbilical cord and cloudy eyes. Tests showed signs of infection in both the umbilical area and the eyes, leading to diagnoses of umbilical artery infection and eye inflammation. The vet surgically removed the infected umbilical structures and treated the eyes with a protective flap. After surgery, the calf had some bleeding in the eye, and bacteria were found in both the umbilical and eye samples, indicating the eye infection was linked to the umbilical infection. The calf's condition was closely monitored, and the surgical intervention helped address the severe infections.

People also search for: calf swollen umbilical cord · calf eye infection treatment · Japanese black calf care

Abstract

A 3-day-old Japanese black calf presented with a swollen and tender umbilical cord and diffusely cloudy and keratoconus eyes. Abdominal ultrasonography confirmed mild enlargement of both umbilical arteries and the urachus with a hyperechoic lumen. Additionally, a hyperechogenic structure suggestive of pus was noted near the abdominal wall. Fluorescein staining revealed corneal epithelial injury, whereas slit lamp examination identified corneal edema, increased corneal thickness, and keratitis with vascularization of the corneal stroma. Based on these findings, diagnoses of omphaloarteritis, omphalourachitis, and bullous keratitis were made. Both umbilical arteries and the urachus were surgically removed; both ocular globes were covered with a third eyelid flap, which was released 30 days postoperatively. On the follow-up, ocular ultrasonography indicated bleeding or fibrin deposits in the vitreous body of the right ocular globe. Because intraocular inflammation was suspected, anterior aqueous humor was collected from the right ocular globe, and bacterial examination was performed with the umbilical artery abscess, urachal abscess, and intraabdominal pus collected intraoperatively.was isolated from the umbilical artery abscess, urachal abscess, intraabdominal pus, and aqueous humor, and all isolates exhibited identical genotypes. These findings suggest that endophthalmitis occurred as a result of the hematogenous spread of bacteria originating from septic umbilical cord remnants and that ocular ultrasonography is useful for assessing intraocular pathologies.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40351766/