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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with nodular keratitis after chronic superficial keratitis

By Ziółkowska, Natalia et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2026·Department of Histology and Embryology·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Nodular Keratitis Associated With a Previous Diagnosis of Chronic Superficial Keratitis in a German Shepherd Dog: A First Case Report.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A German Shepherd with a history of chronic superficial keratitis (a long-term eye condition) developed a non-painful, pink nodule on one of its eyes. After the vet examined the dog and prescribed a topical steroid, the nodule did not improve, leading to a surgical procedure to remove it. The surgery revealed that the nodule was made up of various immune cells but was not cancerous. The dog’s eye condition was successfully treated with this approach, helping to resolve the issue.

People also search for: dog eye nodule treatment · German Shepherd keratitis symptoms · dog eye surgery recovery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical and morphological features of a case of superficial nodular keratitis in a dog. CASE DESCRIPTION: A German shepherd dog previously diagnosed with chronic superficial keratitis (CSK) presented with a nonpainful, unilateral corneal nodule. After a complete ophthalmic examination, topical treatment with dexamethasone (0.1% dexamethason, WZW) was prescribed. However, the patient did not respond to this treatment; thus, a superficial keratectomy was performed. The lesion was examined histologically and immunohistochemically. RESULTS: The ophthalmic examination revealed a round, pink, solid nodule, approximately 0.5 cm in diameter, located in the ventral, paracentral cornea. Results from the Schirmer tear test I, tonometry, and fluorescein staining were in the normal ranges. A small amount of mucous discharge and moderate hyperemia of the bulbar conjunctiva were present. The histological examination revealed a solid mass in the superficial corneal stroma under the corneal epithelium. Hematoxylin and eosin (HE) staining showed that the mass was supplied with blood vessels; HE and immunohistochemistry revealed it consisted of a mixture of plasma cells (MUMcells), B lymphocytes (CD79, CD20cells), T lymphocytes (CD3), and macrophages (Iba1cells). Mitotic figures were absent. Some nuclei in inflammatory infiltrates displayed a Ki76reaction. Inflammatory infiltrates were present in the superficial stroma and the corneal epithelium. CONCLUSION: These novel results demonstrate that the features of nodular keratitis in a German shepherd dog previously diagnosed with CSK differ from the features of xanthogranulomas, nodular episcleritis, corneal granulomas, pyogranulomatous keratitis, corneal epithelial inclusion cysts, protozoal keratitis, and corneal squamous cell carcinoma.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40045494/