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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with eye scarring after fly larvae infection causing poor vision

By Delgado, Esmeralda·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2012·Departamento de Cl&#xed·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Symblepharon secondary to ophthalmomyiasis externa in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 4-month-old crossbred female dog was brought in because she had poor vision and her eyes looked unusual. She had previously been rescued from a railway track, where she was found with fly larvae in her eyes and severe eye discharge. Despite initial treatments like antibiotics and deworming, her eyes did not improve, and she developed a condition called symblepharon, which caused her eyelids to stick to her eyeballs. Surgery was performed to remove the affected tissue and improve her eyelid opening. After the procedure, her eyes healed well, and she regained her vision, with no further issues noted after three years.

People also search for: dog eye problems · puppy vision issues · symblepharon treatment · dog eye surgery recovery · fly larvae in dog eyes

Abstract

A 4-month-old crossbred female dog presented with complaints of poor vision and odd appearance of the eyes. At the age of a month, the animal was found lying in a railway road in a very bad condition and was rescued from death. At that time, the patient was presented with severe bilateral ocular discharge, and from both eyes, dipterous fly larvae were extracted. The dog was given symptomatic treatment (deworming, topical and systemic antibiotics, nutritional support) but never regained a normal eye appearance. At the time of the initial presentation, it had severe vision impairment because of bilateral cicatricial symblepharon, total in the left eye and occupying 3/4 of the cornea in the right eye. Surgery was proposed to attempt a resolution. Superficial keratectomy was performed in both eyes. After a midline incision in the cornea, the conjunctiva was dissected away. The conjunctiva was apposed to and sutured to the limbus and secured in the upper and lower conjunctival fornix. Additionally, in the left eye, a lateral canthotomy and canthoplasty were performed to enlarge the size of the eyelid opening. The corneal epithelium healed without complications, the patient regained vision, and after 36 months of follow-up, no recurrences were observed. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first report of symblepharon secondary to ophthalmomyiasis externa in a dog.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22050788/