F. Ollivier
Ophthalmology, Clinique vétérinaire d’ophtalmologie, Ophtalmo Vétérinaire Inc., Montreal, QC, Canada
Few ocular diseases specific to cats: corneal sequestrum, eosinophilic keratitis, malignant glaucoma.
Orbit
- Retrobulbar neoplasia, abscess/inflammation, trauma (fracture)
- Clinical signs
- Exophthalmos
- Deviation globe
- Protrusion third eyelid
- Conjunctival hyperemia/chemosis +/- corneal lesions
- Orbital neoplasia
- 90% malignant
- Squamous cell carcinoma most common
- Lymphosarcoma second most common
- Diagnostic approach
- Physical and ocular exam (fluorescein test)
- Retropulsion of the globes
- Exploration of the buccal cavity
- Imaging: radiographs, ultra-sound
- Therapeutic approach
- Temporary treatment until the determination of the cause
- Pain management
- Protection of the globe (lubrification, tarsorrhaphy) +/- treatment of the corneal lesions
- If obvious cause→start etiologic treatment
- Abscess: sys AB +/- drainage, sys NSAIDs
- Fracture: sys NSAIDs +/- sys AB
- Globe proptosis
- Severe trauma
- Clinical signs
- Proptosis=palpebral edge behind the equator of the globe
- Conjunctival oedema (chemosis) and hyperemia
- Lateral strabismus
- Corneal and +/- intra-ocular lesions
- Diagnostic approach and prognosis
- Pupils and PMR (fixed mydriasis: bad prognosis, myosis: better prognosis)
- Skull bones integrity
- Globe integrity (rupture: bad prognosis)
- Cornea integrity (rupture: bad prognosis)
- Extra-ocular muscles (rupture of three of the extra-oc muscles: bad prognosis)
- Intra-ocular lesions (hyphema: bad prognosis, risk of glaucoma)
- Therapeutic approach
- Main goal: to preserve the globe
- Pain management
- Keep the cornea moistened/lubricated
- General anesthesia (verify the status of the animal)
- Lateral canthotomy (+/-)
- Clean the eye (diluted betadine 1:50)
- Replace the globe or enucleate (i.e. rupture of the globe, the optic nerve or three extra-ocular muscle)
- Tarsorrhaphy (4/0–5/0, U sutures, “stents”)
- E-collar
- Medical treatment: systemic SAIDs or NSAIDs, topical AB
- Sequelae
- Lateral strabismus (100%)
- Blindness (80%)
- KCS
- Phthisis bulbi
- Glaucoma
- Corneal scar
Eyelid
- Eyelid agenesis
- Portion of the temporal upper eyelid fails to develop
- Concurrent congenital defects
- PPMs
- Optic disk colobomas
- Lenticonus
- Microphthalmos
- Choroidal hypoplasia
- Clinical signs
- Absence of palpebral edge
- Conjunctival hyperemia
- Corneal fibrosis and neovascularization caused by corneal exposure and trichiasis
- Treatment
- Repair the defect (rotational eyelid pedicle flap, H-plasty)
- Cryotherapy or electrolysis for the trichiasis
- Eyelid tumors of the cat
- 2% of the cat diseases are tumors and 2% of the cat tumors affect the eye and its adnexa
- More aggressive and malignant than those in dogs
- Types of eyelid tumors in cats: squamous cell carcinoma, fibrosarcoma, lymphosarcoma, adenoma/adenocarcinoma, mastocytoma, round cell tumor
- Squamous cell carcinoma
- Most common eyelid neoplasm
- Increased incidence in white, aged cats
- Slowly progressive, ulcerative lesions
- Late metastasis
- Diagnosis: based on age, clinical signs, cytologic or histologic examination
- Treatment: surgical excision with wide margins combined with radiation therapy or cryotherapy or hyperthermia or CO2 laser
Conjunctiva, Nictitating Membrane, Cornea
- Conjunctivitis
- Common
- Often primary infections
- Herpesvirus
- Chlamydophila (Chlamydia)
- Mycoplasma
- Feline herpesvirus type 1 (FHV-1)
- Primary infection
- Acute, conjunctival-respiratory infection ± corneal ulcer
- Neonatal, adolescent cats
- Bilateral serous ± mucoid/mucopurulent ocular discharge
- Bilateral hyperemic conjunctiva (chemosis usually not prominent)
- Primary infection usually resolves in 10–14 days (∼80% latently infected)
- Conjunctivitis/herpesvirus
- Young adult cats
- Usually no respiratory infection
- Bilateral
- Intermittent blepharospasm
- Hyperemic conjunctiva ± corneal lesions (epithelial ulcer)
- Ocular discharge mild, serous
- Chronic and/or recurrent
- Factors inducing inflammatory episodes: stress, usage of corticosteroids
- Herpesvirus—diagnosis
- Clinical signs; best to test during active disease
- Lots of viral shedding
- Immunofluorescent antibody testing of conjunctival scrapings
- Fluorescein stain after collecting samples to avoid false positives
- PCR very sensitive; may cause problem with interpretation
- Herpesvirus—treatment
- Topical antibiotics (tetracycline, chloramphenicol, erythromycin)—control secondary bacterial infections
- Antivirals (mainly for keratitis)
- Steroids contra-indicated
- Prophylactic or maintenance treatment
- Oral L-lysine: decrease frequency and severity of the inflammatory episodes (500 mg BID PO adult; 250 mg BID kitten)
- Interferon: prophylactic effects not proven
- Chlamydia psittaci (Chlamydophila felis)
- Unilateral/bilateral
- Conjunctival hyperemia
- Chemosis ++
- Serous ocular discharge
- No corneal involvement
- Cytology: inclusion bodies cytoplasm
- Treatment: tetracycline topically
- Mycoplasma felis
- Pathogenic role unclear
- Unilateral/bilateral conjunctivitis
- Conjunctival follicles, pseudomembranes
- No corneal involvement
- Cytology: inclusion bodies cytoplasm
- Treatment: susceptible to most antibiotics (tetracycline, erythromycin, chloramphenicol)
- Corneal ulcers
- Corneal ulcers from bacteria—uncommon in cats
- Herpetic keratitis (FHV-1) +/- ulcerative
- Traumatic lacerations—common
- Corneal foreign bodies—common
- General comments
- Making the diagnosis of a corneal ulcer is critical for the welfare of the patient
- It is the difference between sight and blindness, or a small scar and a large scar
- Assume ulcers will get worse—treat aggressively
- Melting ulcers
- Corneal degeneration due to proteases is referred to as “melting”
- Ulcers in which proteases are active have a grayish-gelatinous appearance which must be distinguished from corneal edema
- The action of proteases is potentiated by topical corticosteroids
- Herpetic keratitis
- Herpes—only known viral cause of keratitis in cats
- Young animals—keratitis=extension of primary conjunctival infection; adults—keratitis=reactivation of latent virus
- Acute keratitis
- Dendritic ulcers
- Mild-moderate conjunctivitis
- Serous-mucopurulent discharge
- Chronic keratitis
- May have stromal edema
- Fibrosis
- Superficial vascularization
- Diagnosis
- Blepharospasm
- Photophobia
- Epiphora
- Eyelid swelling
- Conjunctival swelling
- Sign of anterior uveitis associated
- Myosis, fibrin, hypopyon
- Corneal edema
- Rough depressed area
- Missing outer layer of cornea
- Evaluation at distance (discharge, symmetry): menace, dazzle, blinking, pupil size
- PLRs, slit lamp examination
- Schirmer tear test
- Corneal culture
- Fluorescein stain
- Rose bengal
- Corneal scraping for cytology
- Fluorescein test (detects a corneal epithelial, stromal ulcer (stain stroma not epithelium))
- Seidel test
- All red, inflamed or painful eyes should be routinely stained with fluorescein
- Look for an underlying cause (KCS, distichia, trichiasis, entropion)
- Treatment
- Medical and/or surgical ... according to whether
- Infected
- Deep
- Melting
- Inflamed (associated uveitis)
- Medical treatment
- Determine and eliminate etiology (e.g. KCS, entropion, infection)
- Prevent or treat infection (broad-spectrum topical antibiotics, culture and sensitivity tests)
- Prevent progression (melting)
- Treat uveitis
- Topical atropine cycloplegia/mydriasis
- Topical NSAIDs (careful)
- No steroids
- Prevent self-trauma: E-collar
- Herpetic keratitis +/- ulcerative
- Antimicrobial treatment
- Antibiotics
- Antiviral agents: good response in acute cases, poor response in chronic cases idoxuridine 1%, acyclovir, trifluridine 1%, ganciclovir, famciclovir
- Treatment of a superficial herpetic ulcer
- Similar to a superficial corneal ulcer (AB+antiviral)
- It can look like an indolent ulcer
- It can be debrided
- Keratotomy contra-indicated
- Treatment anti-inflammatories
- Corticosteroids: contra-indicated as they can activate the viral replication
- NSAIDs: can be used with caution, either topically (diclofenac) or systemically (meloxicam)
- Cyclosporine A
- Surgical treatment
- Conjunctival graft (or biomaterial graft)
- Corneal sequestrum
- Degeneration of collagen
- Accumulation of brown pigment
- Varying intensity
- Unknown etiology
- Ocular irritation (chronic herpetic keratitis, entropion, traumatic ulcers)
- Himalayan, Persian, and Burmese cats are predisposed
- Treatment—keratectomy: removal of the sequestrum
- Keratectomy alone: risk of recurrence
- Keratectomy and conjunctival graft→rare recurrences
- Keratectomy and corneo-conjunctival transposition→rare recurrences
- Eosinophilic keratitis
- Proliferative corneal mass
- White to pink
- Irregularly surfaced
- Vascularized
- Most commonly originates from the temporal or nasal limbus, may involve adjacent conjunctiva and nictitans
- Diagnosis
- Cytology of corneal scrapings
- Eosinophils, mast cells, lymphocytes, plasma cells
- Therapy
- Topical corticosteroids
- Topical 1% cyclosporine A
- Systemic megestrol acetate (side effects: diabetes)
- Recurrences are common
Uvea
- Uveitis
- Anterior uveitis ± chorioretinitis common in cats
- Causes
- Trauma
- Infectious (common)
- Viral: FeLV, FIV, FIP
- Toxoplasmosis
- Fungal
- Cryptococcus
- Blastomycosis
- Histoplasmosis
- Coccidioides
- Candida
- Aspergillus
- Neoplastic
- Diffuse iridal melanoma
- Primary ocular sarcoma
- Primary ciliary body adenomas/adenocarcinomas
- Metastatic uveal neoplasms
- Lens (cataract-induced, lens luxation)
- Immune-mediated
- Idiopathic (70%)
- Clinical signs
- Blepharospasm
- Epiphora
- Photophobia
- Conjunctival hyperemia
- Corneal edema
- Flare/hyphema/hypopyon/fibrin
- Hypotony
- Myosis
- Hyperemia of the iris
- Iris color change
- Keratic precipitates
- Synechiae
- Feline infectious peritonitis
- Coronavirus infection—often in younger cats
- Uveitis is more common with the non-effusive form of FIP
- Ocular lesions may be the only sign of infection or precede systemic signs
- Diagnosis
- Anterior>posterior uveitis
- Aqueous flare, keratic precipitates
- Fibrin and/or hypopyon in AC
- Chorioretinitis, retinal detachment
- Retinal vasculitis, optic neuritis
- Elevated total plasma protein
- Polyclonal gammopathy
- Toxoplasmosis
- Ocular lesions plus generalized disease
- Hematologic spread of sporozoites
- Multiplication of tachyzoites in ocular tissues
- Relatively mild anterior uveitis
- Multifocal retinitis or retinochoroiditis
- Diagnosis: IgG/IgM titers
- FeLV
- Anterior uveitis
- Chorioretinitis
- Lymphoma-related uveitis
- Anterior lymphoma
- Chorioretinal masses
- Retinal detachment
- Secondary glaucoma
- Uveitis treatment
- Mydriatics (1% atropine ointment)
- Anti-inflammatories
- Topical SAIDs: acetate forms of prednisolone or dexamethasone
- Systemic SAIDs (with caution)
- Topical and systemic NSAIDS
- Antibiotics (toxoplasmosis—clindamycin 12.5 mg/kg, BID, 28 days)
- Antifungals
- Uveal tumors
- Diffuse iridal melanoma
- Slowly progressive pigmentation of iris
- Can obstruct iridocorneal angle causing glaucoma
- Late metastasis (liver, lungs)
- Enucleation if
- Uveitis/glaucoma
- Large pigmented area
- Pigmented area not flat
- Irido-corneal angle affected, change in pupil’s shape
- Change in pupil’s mobility
Glaucoma
- Causes
- Primary glaucomas
- Open/normal angle, +/- collapsed cleft (Siamese)
- Narrow/closed angle (chronic)
- Secondary glaucomas (most common in cats)
- Uveitic (chronic anterior uveitis)
- Lens luxations (trauma/age)
- Phacolytic/phacoclastic uveitis (lens perforation), hyphema (rare)
- Intraocular neoplasia (primary/secondary neoplasms)
- Clinical signs
- Often very discreet
- Sometimes only elevated IOP and anisocoria/mydriasis, buphthalmia
- Treatment
- Correct underlying cause when possible
- Mannitol in acute cases, IOP >50 mm Hg
- Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors: dorzolamide 2% TID
- Beta blockers: timolol 0.5% BID
- Analogs of prostaglandins: not effective in cats
- Laser cyclophotocoagulation
Lens
- Lens cataract
- Primary: rare in cats
- Secondary to: uveitis, trauma, glaucoma, lens luxation, diabetes (rare)
- Congenital: rare
- Cataract surgery
- By phacoemulsification
- Intra-ocular lens: 53 D
- Outcomes even better than in dogs
Posterior Segment
- Tapetal fundus—larger and brighter than the dog
- Non-tapetal fundus—related to hair coat color
- Retinal vasculature—three large pairs of arteries and veins
- Optic nerve head: small and round
- Nutritional retinal degeneration
- Taurine deficiency
- Identical to feline central retinal degeneration
- Cats fed dog food or “homemade” diets
- Initial lesion=hyperreflectivity of area centralis
- Chronic deficiency severe retinal degeneration and irreversible blindness
- Baytril toxicity
- Safe dose 2.5 mg/kg BID PO
- Original dose: 11 mg/kg PO q 24 h
- Rod-cone degeneration in Abyssinian
- Begins 1.5–2 years of age
- Complete degeneration in 2–4 years
- Inflammation (chorioretinitis)
- FIP
- FeLV
- Toxoplasmosis
- Fungi
- Neoplasia (primary or secondary)
- Hypertensive retinopathy
- Old cats
- Ocular signs
- Sudden blindness
- Dilated or poorly to unresponsive pupils
- Tortuous retinal vessels, serous retinal detachment
- Retinal and vitreal hemorrhages
- Systemic signs
- Systolic blood pressure >160 mm Hg
- Cardiomegaly
- Renal disease
- Hyperthyroidism
- Hyperglycemia
- Treatment
- Treat underlying disease
- Calcium channel blocker, amlodipine 0.625 mg/cat/day
- Retinal folds and detachments
- Separation sensory/epithelial retina
- Congenital
- Secondary to other diseases
- Causes: hypertension, hyperviscosity, trauma, infections, neoplasms
Conclusions
- Take care of the eyes! They can reveal the presence of a systemic disease. Important to understand where, how, and why.
- Important aspects of the treatment:
- Pain management.
- Preservation of the vision.
- Esthetic appearance of the animal.