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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with eye swelling and foreign body under the eye surface

By Welihozkiy, Anja et al.·Published in Veterinary Ophthalmology·2011·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Scleral and suprachoroidal foreign body in a dog – a case report

Species:
dog
Canine GlaucomaStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A 2-year-old male Springer Spaniel was brought to the vet with a swollen right eye that had been bulging for three weeks. The dog showed signs of inflammation and swelling around the eye, prompting further tests like ultrasound and CT scans. These tests revealed a foreign object, likely plant material, lodged in the eye. Due to the severity of the situation, the vet decided to remove the eye (enucleation). After the surgery, the dog was diagnosed with severe inflammation caused by the foreign body, and the procedure was successful in resolving the issue.

People also search for: dog eye swelling treatment · Springer Spaniel eye problems · foreign body in dog eye

Abstract

AbstractA 2‐year‐old male castrated Springer Spaniel with a 3‐week history of waxing and waning right sided exophthalmos, periorbital swelling, chemosis, and fundic changes was examined. Ophthalmic examination of the right eye revealed slight chemosis and nictitating membrane protrusion. Indirect ophthalmoscopy showed an approximately 8 mm peripapillary hyporeflective tapetal lesion with subretinal edema consistent with a bulbar/retrobulbar disease process. Inflammatory or neoplastic diseases were the main differential diagnoses. Ancillary diagnostics (ocular ultrasound and computed tomography) showed a focal, poorly defined dense tissue involving the caudomedial aspect of the right globe, adjacent to the optic nerve head without apparent orbital involvement. Considering the duration, location, and severity of the clinical findings, enucleation of the right globe was performed. Histopathology revealed focal thickening of the posterior wall with severe pyogranulomatous inflammation, surrounding a foreign body most consistent with plant material embedded between the sclera and the choroid (suprachoroidal). This report describes a rare case of a scleral/suprachoroidal foreign body (plant material), and outlines the difficulty of establishing an etiological diagnosis using standard ocular imaging.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1463-5224.2011.00922.x