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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Snow leopard eye ulcer treated with horse amniotic membrane graft

By Knollinger, Amy M et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2018·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Use of equine amniotic membrane free-island grafts for treatment of a midstromal corneal ulcer and descemetocele in a snow leopard (Panthera uncia).

Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old female snow leopard was brought in for eye problems, including squinting, discharge, and a cloudy cornea in her right eye. After five weeks of medical treatment, including antibiotics and serum drops, her condition didn’t improve, so the vet decided to perform surgery. They used a special graft from equine amniotic membrane to repair a deep corneal ulcer and later addressed a related issue with a second graft. Both surgeries were successful, and the snow leopard regained good vision without further complications.

People also search for: snow leopard eye problems · corneal ulcer treatment in big cats · equine amniotic membrane grafts for animals

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION A 7-year-old sexually intact female snow leopard (Panthera uncia) was examined because of blepharospasm, periocular discharge, ventral deviation of the upper eyelid cilia, third eyelid prolapse, and corneal opacity of the right eye. CLINICAL FINDINGS An ophthalmic examination performed with the patient anesthetized revealed a 3 × 3-mm ulcer that extended approximately 60% of the depth of the right cornea and was accompanied by perilesional and intralesional cellular infiltrates and active vascularization. The upper eyelid of the right eye also had a previously repaired coloboma resulting in trichiasis. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME Surgical intervention was elected after 5 weeks of medical management including topical administration of autologous serum and topical, subconjunctival, and systemic administration of antimicrobials failed to yield any improvement in the ulcer. Equine amniotic membrane free-island graft placement and eyelid revision surgeries were performed. Two and a half weeks later, a descemetocele was diagnosed ventrolateral to the original ulcer, and a second equine amniotic membrane free-island grafting procedure was performed. Both grafts healed without further intervention. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Equine amniotic membrane free-island grafts were used to successfully repair a corneal ulcer and descemetocele in a snow leopard. The grafting procedure spared the affected globe and resulted in satisfactory cosmesis and functional vision. This procedure should be considered as an option for corneal repair in nondomestic species for which postoperative care and medical treatment options are limited.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30668260/