Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA.
Department of Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Vet Ophthalmol. 2020 Mar;23(2):374-385. doi: 10.1111/vop.12712. Epub 2019 Sep 22.
To describe the historical, clinical, and diagnostic features of small animal patients affected by cactus-induced keratoconjunctivitis and their response to therapy.
Three dogs and one cat.
Ophthalmic examination directed subsequent selected diagnostic tests in each case including light microscopy of extracted foreign bodies, in vivo confocal microscopy (IVCM), corneal histopathology, and corneal bacterial culture. Treatments consisted of foreign body surgical extraction with concurrent medical therapy (three cases), or medical therapy alone (one case).
Clinical histories obtained supported acute cactus injury in all cases. Ophthalmic abnormalities were unilateral in each case and included ulcerative keratoconjunctivitis associated with linear, microscopic conjunctival and/or corneal penetrating cactus spines, known as glochids. Light microscopy and IVCM showed glochids to be heavily barbed, consistent with the spine morphology Prickly Pear (Opuntia) cactus species. Bacterial culture yielded Proprionicimonas sp. in one case with keratomalacia. Surgical extraction of spines was challenging, and residual conjunctival and/or corneal glochids were present in all cases. Patient discomfort resolved at a median of 21 days (range 10-51 days). Vision-threatening complications were not observed in any case at the time of last follow-up examination. Epithelial downgrowth, demonstrated by IVCM and histopathology, was present in one case at 108-day follow-up.
Cactus-induced keratoconjunctivitis should be considered as a differential in regions in which Opuntia cacti are prevalent, and microscopic ocular foreign bodies are observed. Although glochids are difficult to extract, positive clinical outcomes can occur in small animal patients despite the presence of residual organic corneal foreign material.
描述受仙人掌引起的角结膜炎影响的小动物患者的历史、临床和诊断特征及其对治疗的反应。
三只狗和一只猫。
眼科检查指导每个病例中随后选择的诊断测试,包括提取的异物的光镜检查、活体共聚焦显微镜检查(IVCM)、角膜组织病理学检查和角膜细菌培养。治疗包括异物的手术提取和同时的医学治疗(三例),或单独的医学治疗(一例)。
获得的临床病史支持所有病例均为急性仙人掌损伤。每例的眼部异常均为单侧,包括溃疡性角结膜炎,伴有线性、显微镜下的结膜和/或角膜穿透性仙人掌刺,称为钩刺。光镜和 IVCM 显示钩刺有很重的倒钩,与刺梨仙人掌(Opuntia)刺的形态一致。细菌培养在一例中产生了丙酸单胞菌属。在所有病例中,棘刺的手术提取均具有挑战性,且在结膜和/或角膜中仍存在残留的钩刺。患者不适在中位数为 21 天(范围 10-51 天)时得到解决。在最后一次随访检查时,任何病例均未观察到视力威胁性并发症。上皮下生长,通过 IVCM 和组织病理学证实,在一例中于 108 天随访时存在。
在仙人掌流行的地区,以及观察到微观眼部异物的地区,应将仙人掌引起的角结膜炎视为一种鉴别诊断。尽管钩刺很难提取,但即使存在残留的有机角膜异物,小动物患者也可以获得积极的临床结果。