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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog in Germany with eye worms causing treatment-resistant

By Kregel-Weber, Myra K et al.·Published in Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe K, Kleintiere/Heimtiere·2021·AniCura Bielefeld GmbH.·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: [Ocular thelaziosis in a dog in Germany - an autochthonous case?].

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A female dog in Germany was brought to the vet for severe eye irritation that wouldn't go away. After a thorough eye exam, the vet found three adult eye worms causing her conjunctivitis (inflammation of the eye) and other symptoms like excessive tearing and squinting. The vet removed the worms and treated her with a topical medication. Thankfully, all her symptoms cleared up within a week after treatment. This case highlights a rare eye worm infection that can occur even in dogs that haven't traveled abroad.

People also search for: dog eye infection treatment · why is my dog squinting · dog conjunctivitis symptoms · eye worms in dogs · moxidectin for dogs

Abstract

is a vector-borne nematode transmitted by(fruit flies) and one of the causes of mild to severe conjunctivitis and keratitis in dogs, cats, rabbits and humans. It has been formerly known as the oriental eye worm based on its geographic occurrence. By now, it has been shown to be endemic in several southern and eastern European countries as well as extending its geographic distribution further throughout Europe. In the present case report,infection was diagnosed in a female dog from Germany. The dog was referred by a local veterinarian due to a treatment-resistant conjunctivitis. A comprehensive ophthalmologic examination revealed 3 adult eye worms in the conjunctival sac as well as on the bulbar side of the nictitating membrane of the left eye. These were identified by morphological features and molecular techniques asand represented the primary cause of the dog's unilateral blepharospasm, hyperemic conjunctiva and epiphora. Treatment consisted of manual collection of the adult worms and the administration of moxidectin/imidacloprid as spot on (Advocate, Bayer). All clinical signs resolved within one week after treatment. In Germany, ocular thelaziosis still represents a rare disease. Usually, it is diagnosed in cats and dogs either imported from abroad or accompanying the owners on holiday travels to endemic countries. The dog presented in this case report was born in Germany. Except for a one-week stay in the Netherlands 11 months before the symptoms began, it had never traveled abroad. Considering the prepatency of, an autochthonous transmission in this case is highly probable.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33588466/