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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Nonulcerative keratouveitis as a manifestation of Leptospiral infection in a horse.

Journal:
Veterinary ophthalmology
Year:
2003
Authors:
Wada, Shinya et al.
Affiliation:
Racehorse Hospital · Japan
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

A 2-year-old Thoroughbred filly was brought in because she was experiencing pain in her left eye and excessive tearing. The eye showed signs of swelling, but tests did not show any serious damage to the cornea. Despite treatment with antibiotics and anti-inflammatory medications, her condition worsened, leading to a diagnosis of nonulcerative keratouveitis, which is inflammation of the eye without ulcers. Further tests revealed that the filly was infected with Leptospira, a type of bacteria, and unfortunately, she was declared blind after 91 days due to the severity of the eye problems. The treatment did not work effectively, and the horse ultimately had to be donated for further study.

Abstract

A 2-year-old Thoroughbred filly presented with ocular pain and epiphora of the left eye. The pupil was miotic and the cornea edematous near the ventro-temporal limbus, but did not retain any fluorescein. The topical antibiotics and atropine and diclofenac, and systemic flunixin meglumine and antibiotic therapy did not resolve the condition. A pink and fleshy infiltrate developed near the limbus indicating nonulcerative keratouveitis. The anterior uveitis deteriorated as manifested by the presence of dyscoria, hypopyon, and organized fibrin in the anterior chamber. Ocular signs were improved by topical and subconjunctival corticosteroids, but repeatedly deteriorated as the frequency of medication was reduced. The horse was seropositive to three serovars of Leptospira interrogans. The animal was diagnosed as blind on day 91 by the absence of pupillary light and menace reflexes, and donated for histopathologic diagnosis. The corneal opacity was histologically fibrotic and infiltrated predominantly by lymphocytes with Descemet's membrane partially disrupted by macrophages. The choroid was infiltrated by lymphocytes, eosinophils and basophils, and was positive to IgG and C3. There were filamentous or spiral structures positive to Warthin-Starry stain in the renal cortex. There was also polymerase chain reaction amplification of the leptospiral gene in the kidney. From these findings nonulcerative keratouveitis was believed to be caused by systemic infection with Leptospira.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12950649/