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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Corneal cross-linking treatment for bullous keratopathy in dogs

By Pot, Simon A et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2015·Equine Department·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Treatment of bullous keratopathy with corneal collagen cross-linking in two dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old male Labrador was brought in with painful eye problems caused by bullous keratopathy, which led to corneal erosions that didn't respond to other treatments. The veterinarian used a procedure called corneal collagen cross-linking (CXL) to help reduce swelling and improve vision. After the treatment, the dog's eyes were comfortable and showed no signs of issues for over 17 months, with the owner noting a significant improvement in vision for about six months. However, another dog treated similarly did not see lasting vision improvement, although its corneal thickness initially decreased.

People also search for: dog eye problems treatment · bullous keratopathy in dogs · corneal collagen cross-linking for dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Corneal collagen cross-linking with riboflavin and UV-A (CXL) decreases corneal oedema and increases visual acuity in human patients with bullous keratopathy. Presumed mechanisms are an increase in collagen packing density and a reduction in stromal swelling pressure. We present two cases in which CXL was used to treat bullous keratopathy in dogs. PROCEDURES: Four eyes of two dogs with painful bullous keratopathy-induced corneal erosions that were resistant to prior therapy were treated with CXL. Both corneas of the second patient were dehydrated to ± 400 μm corneal thickness using topical 70% glycerol solution immediately prior to CXL. Follow-up included slit-lamp examination, fluorescein staining and photographic documentation in both cases and high-resolution ultrasound examination in the second patient. RESULTS: All four eyes were comfortable and fluorescein negative at 1-week post-CXL and remained so for the rest of the follow-up period (17.5 months for case 1 and 6 months for case 2). The owner of the first patient reported a less oedematous cornea and improvement in vision that lasted for 6 months. Despite a reported lack of improvement in vision in the second patient, corneal thickness initially decreased, but was back at baseline thickness at the 4-month recheck. CONCLUSIONS: Similar to humans, CXL might become a useful treatment option for bullous keratopathy-induced therapy-resistant corneal erosions in dogs. Patient comfort was greatly improved, but corneal thickness decrease was not as long-lasting as reported for humans. The presently used protocols might need modification to fit the dog cornea.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24373539/