Qualitative tear film and conjunctival goblet cell assessment of cats with corneal sequestra

Objectives To evaluate the tear film qualitatively and conjunctival goblet cell numbers in cats with and without corneal sequestra. Animals studied and procedures This was a prospective evaluation of 11 cats with corneal sequestra and 14 control eyes that were either the contralateral normal eye whe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Veterinary ophthalmology 2005-05, Vol.8 (3), p.167-170
Hauptverfasser: Grahn, B.H, Sisler, S, Storey, E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives To evaluate the tear film qualitatively and conjunctival goblet cell numbers in cats with and without corneal sequestra. Animals studied and procedures This was a prospective evaluation of 11 cats with corneal sequestra and 14 control eyes that were either the contralateral normal eye when the sequestrum was unilateral or from control cats of similar age with no ocular disease. All cats in this study were examined by a veterinary ophthalmologist. The ophthalmic examinations included a neuro-ophthalmic evaluation, Schirmer tear tests, fluorescein staining, tear film break-up times, applanation tonometry, biomicroscopy, and indirect ophthalmoscopy. The palpebral conjunctiva at the dorsal nasal, ventral nasal, dorsal temporal and ventral temporal fornices were biopsied after topical anesthetic was applied to the cornea and conjunctiva. The conjunctival biopsies were fixed in formalin and sectioned routinely and stained with hematoxylin and eosin, and periodic acid-Schiff. These slides were examined by light microscopy by a blinded examiner. Goblet cell numbers were compared to conjunctival basal epithelial cell numbers by region. The goblet cell numbers by region from the eyes with sequestra was statistically compared to those from eyes without sequestra, with a student's paired t-test. Conjunctival swabs were collected from the cats with corneal sequestra and submitted for polymerase chain reaction for Herpes felis, Chlamydia psiitticia, and Mycoplasma felis. The corneal sequestra were removed by surgical keratectomy and fixed and stained routinely, and examined by light microscopy. Results No neurologic abnormalities were detected in any of the cats. The Schirmer tear tests (eyes with sequestra 14 +/- 5.1 mm/min; normal eyes 15 +/- 6.8 mm/min) and intraocular pressures (eyes with sequestra 21 +/- 6.6; normal eyes 22 +/- 5.8) were within normal reference ranges for cats. Biomicroscopic examinations revealed varied sizes and depths of brown- and amber-colored corneal sequestra. No abnormalities were noted on indirect ophthalmoscopic examinations. The tear film break-up time was 21 s (+/- 12) for the normal eyes (n = 14) and 14 s (+/- 13) in eyes with corneal sequestra (n = 11). The average goblet/epithelial cell ratios by region for the normal eyes and the eyes with sequestra respectively were 0.66, 0.56 for the dorsal nasal fornix, 0.68, 0.57 for the ventral nasal fornix, 0.63, 0.48 for the temporal dorsal fornix, and 0.55, 0.49 for the temporal v
ISSN:1463-5216
1463-5224
DOI:10.1111/j.1463-5224.2005.00362.x