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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Superficial keratectomy to heal corneal ulcers in dogs with corneal

By Bayley, Kellam D et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2019·Veterinary Ophthalmic Referrals, Australia·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Superficial keratectomy as a treatment for non-healing corneal ulceration associated with primary corneal endothelial degeneration.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with painful, non-healing corneal ulcers caused by primary corneal endothelial degeneration (PCED) were treated with a surgical procedure called superficial keratectomy. Among the 47 eyes treated, about 88% healed after the first check-up, and this improved to nearly 98% after further monitoring. Dalmatians were particularly affected, with all diagnosed cases developing corneal ulcers. The surgery proved to be a successful option for resolving these painful conditions, although a small number of eyes did experience ulcers again several years later.

People also search for: dog corneal ulcer treatment · Dalmatians eye problems · superficial keratectomy for dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To analyze a study population of dogs with primary corneal endothelial degeneration (PCED) for information on the patterns of disease and to report the efficacy of superficial keratectomy (SK) for resolution of non-healing corneal ulcers associated with PCED. ANIMALS STUDIED: Primary corneal endothelial degeneration was diagnosed in 238 dogs between 1998 and 2017. Corneal ulceration associated with PCED was present in 89 dogs (109 eyes), of which 47 eyes were treated with SK. PROCEDURES: A retrospective assessment of medical records was performed to determine the signalment patterns of PCED, and the success rate of the SK procedure for resolving PCED-associated corneal ulceration. Descriptive statistics were reported on the signalment of PCED cases, with odd ratios and confidence intervals calculated to detect breed predispositions. RESULTS: Primary corneal endothelial degeneration was diagnosed in 238 dogs, 40.8% were female and 59.2% were male, with a mean age at diagnosis of 11.4 years. Dachshunds, Dalmatians, English Springer Spaniels, Welsh Springer Spaniels, Chihuahuas, Cocker Spaniels, and Golden Retrievers were significantly over-represented. All PCED-affected Dalmatians developed associated corneal ulceration. Follow-up information was available for 41/47 eyes treated with SK. At the first reassessment, 87.8% were healed which increased to 97.6% with subsequent monitoring. Four eyes (9.8%) had late corneal ulcer occurrence following SK, at a median time following SK of 182 weeks post-surgery. CONCLUSIONS: Superficial keratectomy was an effective option for resolving painful non-healing corneal ulcers associated with PCED. Dalmatians may be at increased risk of developing PCED-associated corneal ulceration.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30365226/