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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Eye injuries from porcupine quills in dogs and how they heal

By Shank, Alba Maria M et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2021·IDEXX Laboratories, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Ocular porcupine quilling in dogs: Gross, clinical and histopathologic findings in 17 cases (1986-2018).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A dog with a history of encounters with porcupines developed serious eye problems due to quills that had entered its eye. Over time, the dog showed symptoms like retinal detachment and inflammation, which led to the need for surgery to remove the eye. In many cases, the quills were not visible, making diagnosis challenging. If your dog has been near porcupines and shows any eye issues, it's important to have them checked for possible quill injuries, even if you can't see anything wrong.

People also search for: dog eye problems porcupine quills · signs of eye injury in dogs · dog eye surgery recovery

Abstract

The objectives of this retrospective study were to evaluate the histopathologic changes associated with porcupine ocular quill injuries in dogs, to discuss the various methods of quill detection when quills are not grossly visible, and to discuss the pathogenesis of delayed ocular quill injuries in dogs. Seventeen globes sustaining ocular quilling injuries from 17 dogs (1986-2018) were identified in the COPLOW archives and the gross and histologic changes tabulated and compared. All cases were dogs, with one whole globe submitted from each patient. Sixteen of 17 cases had known or suspected porcupine encounters in the weeks or years preceding enucleation. Histopathologic findings included retinal detachment, hyphema, cataract, granulomatous to pyogranulomatous inflammation (uveitis, endophthalmitis, panophthalmitis), lens capsule rupture, suppurative phakitis, scleral perforation, stromal keratitis, breaks in Descemet's membrane, preiridal fibrovascular membrane, anterior and posterior synechia, Schnabel's cavernous atrophy, and periorbital fibrosis. Quill-associated ocular trauma can have a significant deleterious effect on vision and result in enucleation. The time from initial quilling to the manifestation of ocular signs may be prolonged (weeks to years). Any dog presenting for ocular signs with a history of a previous porcupine encounter should be carefully checked for quill migration into the globe as the source of ocular disease. Quills may not be visible grossly, and ancillary imaging techniques can be utilized with various rates of success.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33332752/