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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Glaucoma in 82 cats from 1995 to 1999 study

By Blocker, T & Van Der Woerdt, A·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2001·The Animal Medical Centre, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: The feline glaucomas: 82 cases (1995-1999).

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 82 cats, mostly around 9 years old, were diagnosed with glaucoma, which can cause serious eye problems like cloudy eyes and blindness. Many of these cats had high eye pressure and were already blind when they were brought in. The vets tried medications to lower the eye pressure, which worked for over half of the cases, helping to keep the pressure stable. For those who didn't respond to medication, surgery was performed. While some cats retained their vision, many had already lost it before treatment began.

People also search for: cat glaucoma symptoms · how to treat glaucoma in cats · cat eye problems treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe signalment, ophthalmic abnormalities, and response to treatment in cats with glaucoma. DESIGN: Retrospective study. ANIMALS: Eighty-two cats with 93 glaucomatous eyes. CRITERIA FOR INCLUSION: Medical records of all cats with glaucoma presented to the ophthalmology services at two referral specialty hospitals between 1995 and 1999 were reviewed. Cats were included if intraocular pressure (IOP) > 25 mmHg, if buphthalmos was present, or if a shallow anterior chamber was present and IOP > or = 5 mm Hg higher than the contralateral normal eye. RESULTS: Mean +/- SD age was 9.2 +/- 4.4 years. Thirty-one cats were female; 51 were male. Breeds included 69 domestic and 13 pure-bred cats. One eye was affected in 71 cats; both eyes in 11 cats. The most common presenting complaints and ophthalmic abnormalities were cataract, corneal edema, mydriasis, buphthalmos, cloudy eye, and blindness. Mean intraocular pressure in the affected eye was 36.4 +/- 14.7 mmHg. The glaucomas were believed to be secondary in 81 eyes, primary in five eyes, and undetermined in seven eyes. The goal of medical therapy was to maintain IOP in a comfortable range we presumed to be < 30 mm Hg in blind eyes, and to maintain IOP below 25 mmHg to preserve vision in visual eyes. Intraocular pressure was maintained in a comfortable range or normal range in 58% of all eyes using medical therapy alone. Surgery was performed in nine eyes after medical management failed. Sixty-seven eyes were blind, 21 were visual, and five had decreased vision at initial presentation. With treatment, vision was retained in nine eyes, deteriorated in five eyes, and was lost in three eyes. CONCLUSIONS: The glaucomas were most frequently secondary in cats and resulted in blindness prior to presentation in the majority of eyes in our study. Medical management controlled IOP in more than half of the eyes, and maintained vision in almost half of visual eyes.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11422987/