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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Subcutaneous triamcinolone for treating cat eye inflammation

By Lucyshyn, Danica R et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2021·Department of Surgical and Radiological Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Subcutaneous administration of triamcinolone as part of the management of feline eosinophilic keratoconjunctivitis.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 3-year-old domestic shorthair cat was treated for eosinophilic keratoconjunctivitis, a condition that causes eye irritation and corneal plaques. The cat received subcutaneous injections of triamcinolone, a steroid that helps reduce inflammation. The treatment was well tolerated, and the corneal plaques resolved in about two weeks, which was similar to the time it took for other cats not receiving the steroid. All corneal ulcers healed within 14 days after the injection, showing that triamcinolone can be an effective option for managing this eye condition in cats.

People also search for: cat eye problems treatment · eosinophilic keratoconjunctivitis in cats · triamcinolone for cat eye issues

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this retrospective case-control study was to report the efficacy of subcutaneous triamcinolone as part of a regimen for feline eosinophilic keratoconjunctivitis (FEK). METHODS: Records and clinical photographs were reviewed and lesions semiquantitatively graded for cats with cytologically confirmed FEK. Clinical data were compared between a study population of nine cats (11 eyes) treated with, and a reference population of seven cats (eight eyes) treated without, a median of 0.11 mg/kg (range 0.10-0.20 mg/kg) of triamcinolone acetonide subcutaneously. RESULTS: Breed, sex, age and prevalence of corneal ulceration at presentation; corneal disease severity before and at the initiation of immunomodulation; and duration of antiviral treatment before immunomodulation did not differ significantly between populations (⩾0.059). Corneal plaques resolved in five cats each from the study and reference populations ( = 0.366). Median (range) time from immunomodulation to corneal plaque resolution did not significantly differ ( = 0.246) between the study (median 14 days; range 8-38 days) and reference (median 28 days, range 14-46 days) populations. No adverse reactions were attributed to triamcinolone administration, and all corneal ulcers in the study population re-epithelialized within 14 days (range 8-38 days) following triamcinolone injection. Time to corneal ulcer re-epithelialization following triamcinolone injection varied minimally in those receiving antivirals prior to (8 or 30 days until re-epithelialization), simultaneously with (38 days) or after (14 or 24 days) triamcinolone. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In otherwise healthy cats with FEK, subcutaneous administration of triamcinolone appears to be well tolerated and as efficacious as conventional topical immunomodulatory therapies. It may be especially useful in ulcerated eyes where topical immunomodulation is contraindicated.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33140999/