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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Complications and vision results after dog cataract surgery 2006-2008

By Klein, Heidi E et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2011·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Postoperative complications and visual outcomes of phacoemulsification in 103 dogs (179 eyes): 2006-2008.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 103 dogs, including many Boston terriers, underwent cataract surgery (phacoemulsification) to improve their vision. After the surgery, most dogs (about 83%) had functional vision, but some experienced complications like high eye pressure, corneal issues, and inflammation. Boston terriers were found to be at a significantly higher risk for blindness and other complications as they aged. Overall, the surgery had a good outcome for most dogs, but owners of Boston terriers should be aware of the increased risks.

People also search for: dog cataract surgery complications · Boston terrier eye problems · dog vision after cataract surgery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the postoperative complications and visual outcome after phacoemulsification in dogs and identify risk factors for complications. ANIMALS STUDIED: One hundred and three dogs (179 eyes) that had phacoemulsification with or without intraocular lens (IOL) placement including foldable acrylic IOLs between March 2006 and March 2008 at Purdue University Veterinary Teaching Hospital. PROCEDURE: Medical records were reviewed and occurrence and dates of postoperative complications were tabulated. Visual status at the final recheck during the study period was recorded. Additional information including signalment, diabetes mellitus status, operative complications and factors, presence of prior lens induced uveitis, preoperative retinopexy, and cataract stage was collected. RESULTS: The majority of eyes were functionally visual (148 eyes, 82.7%) at the end of the study period. Blindness was seen in 18 eyes (10.0%) with reduced vision in 13 eyes (7.3%) at the final recheck. Postoperative ocular hypertension (22.9%), corneal lipid opacity (19.0%), uveitis (16.2%), intraocular hemorrhage (12.3%), retinal detachment (8.4%), and glaucoma (6.7%) were the most common postoperative complications seen in eyes. The odds of blindness were significantly greater (OR = 290.44) in the eyes of Boston terriers compared with mixed breed dogs and with each year of increasing age (OR = 2.00). CONCLUSION: The prognosis for vision after phacoemulsification with injectable IOL placement is good. Boston terriers were at much higher risk for certain complications.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21366827/