Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with eye bulge and redness caused by orbital cyst after trauma
By Margetts, Adam C. et al.·Published in Veterinary Ophthalmology·2022·Davies Veterinary Specialists Higham Gobion Hertfordshire UK, United Kingdom·View original on Crossref →
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Original publication title: Retrobulbar respiratory epithelial orbital cyst in a dog: A case report
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 10-month-old female French Bulldog was brought to the vet because her right eye was bulging and she had been experiencing intermittent eye irritation after being hit in the eye by a tennis ball five months earlier. The vet found that the eye was still functional but showed signs of swelling and inflammation. Imaging tests revealed a fluid-filled cyst behind the eye, which was causing pressure on the optic nerve. The cyst was drained and later surgically removed, and seven months after the surgery, there had been no signs of it returning.
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Abstract
AbstractA 10‐month‐old female, neutered French Bulldog presented with a history of unilateral right‐sided intermittent conjunctivitis and exophthalmos. The patient suffered blunt force trauma to the right eye after a tennis ball impact approximately five months prior to presentation. Examination identified the patient was visual with exophthalmos, lateral strabismus, conjunctival hyperaemia, episcleral congestion, and papilloedema. Magnetic resonance imaging and ultrasonography identified an approximately two centimeter diameter fluid‐filled structure directly posterior to the globe leading to displacement of the optic nerve and distortion of the posterior globe wall. Centesis of the lesion demonstrated neutrophilic and macrophagic inflammation with evidence of prior hemorrhage. Within four weeks, the structure had re‐filled to its original size and was subsequently excised in its entirety, via a lateral orbitotomy. Histopathologic findings indicated a non‐keratinising orbital cyst, the lining of which was consistent with a respiratory epithelial cyst. Recurrence had not occurred seven months' post‐surgery. To the author's knowledge, previous reports of retrobulbar respiratory epithelial cysts have not been documented in animals.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/vop.13013