Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Horse suddenly went blind - mass removed from sinus
By Radcliffe, Rolfe M et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2016·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Transnasal, Endoscopically Guided Skull-Based Surgery by Pharyngotomy for Mass Removal from the Sphenopalatine Sinus in a Horse.
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A 7-year-old Warmblood gelding suddenly became blind three weeks after running into a fence. A CT scan revealed a large mass in the sphenopalatine sinus, which was likely a chondroma (a type of cartilage tumor). The veterinarians performed a specialized surgery using a transnasal approach to remove the mass. While the horse has not regained its vision after 6.5 years, it has not experienced any further progression of the disease and has recovered well from the surgery.
People also search for: horse sudden blindness treatment · horse sinus mass surgery · Warmblood gelding eye problems
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To report a transnasal, endoscopically guided ventral surgical approach for accessing the cranial and caudal segments of the sphenopalatine sinus for mass removal in a horse. STUDY DESIGN: Case report. ANIMAL: Adult horse with acute onset blindness referable to a soft tissue mass within the sphenopalatine sinus. CLINICAL REPORT: A 7-year-old Warmblood gelding presented with a history of running into a fence and falling. No neurologic signs were identified at initial examination but acute blindness was noted 3 weeks later. On computed tomography (CT) the sphenopalatine sinus was filled with a large homogeneous mass with poor contrast enhancement that extended dorsally with thinning to the dorsal cortex of the sphenoid bone, just rostral to the entrance of the optic canals into the cranial cavity. Surgical access to the sphenopalatine sinus was achieved using a transnasal, endoscopically guided ventral pharyngotomy approach and the mass lesion was removed. A presumptive diagnosis of chondroma was made based on histopathology. The horse recovered well from surgery, and although it has not regained vision as of 6.5 years postoperatively, the disease has not progressed. CONCLUSION: Transnasal, endoscopically-guided ventral surgical access to the sphenopalatine sinus is possible in horses and may improve access in horses with disease extending caudally beyond the palatine portion of the sinus. Use of smaller diameter or specialized instruments, such as various endoscopic bone cutting instruments, and CT image guidance may improve sinus access by this route.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27731516/