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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Ulcerative fungal eye infection in a Brown Swiss cow

By Voelter-Ratson, Katrin et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2013·Equine Department·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Ulcerative fungal keratitis in a Brown Swiss cow.

Species:
cattle

Plain-English summary

An 11-year-old Brown Swiss cow was brought to a veterinary hospital because she was lying down and not getting up, likely due to anemia and dehydration. Upon examination, the cow developed eye problems, including squinting and excessive tearing, which led to the discovery of a corneal ulcer caused by a fungal infection. Initial treatment with antibiotic ointment didn't help, so the vet switched to a stronger antifungal ointment and eye drops, along with continued antibiotics. Within six days, the cow's eye symptoms improved significantly, and the fungal infection was identified as Eurotium amstelodami.

People also search for: cow eye problems · Brown Swiss cow corneal ulcer treatment · fungal infection in cow eye

Abstract

An 11-year-old Brown Swiss cow was referred to the Farm Animal Department of the Veterinary Teaching Hospital in Zurich, Switzerland, because of lateral recumbency due to puerperal hemolytic anemia. The animal had developed enophthalmos due to dehydration at the time of presentation. Two days after hospitalization, the cow showed blepharospasm and epiphora of the right eye. Ophthalmic examination of the right eye revealed a fluorescein-positive, paraxial, superficial corneal ulcer with focal edema, and mild superficial neovascularization. White corneal stromal infiltrates were seen at the edges of the ulcer bed. After initial topical treatment with an antibiotic ointment (Neomycin 3.5 mg/g, Bacitracin 250 IU/g) three times a day, an increase in corneal infiltrates was noted on re-examination 2 days later. Several fluorescein-negative, punctate, stromal, white opacities were seen dorsal to the ulcer. Cytology demonstrated the presence of fungal hyphae. Topical treatment with 2% miconazole ointment and 0.36% K-EDTA eye drops six times daily and four times daily, respectively, from the second day and continued antibiotics three times daily resolved the clinical symptoms within 6 days. Fungal culture identified the fungal organism as Eurotium amstelodami.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23437914/