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Corneal cross-linking in 9 horses with ulcerative keratitis

BACKGROUND: Corneal ulcers are one of the most common eye problems in the horse and can cause varying degrees of visual impairment. Secondary infection and protease activity causing melting of the corneal stroma are always concerns in patients with corneal ulcers. Corneal collagen cross-linking (CXL...

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Autores principales: Hellander-Edman, Anna, Makdoumi, Karim, Mortensen, Jes, Ekesten, Björn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3703264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23803176
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-6148-9-128
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author Hellander-Edman, Anna
Makdoumi, Karim
Mortensen, Jes
Ekesten, Björn
author_facet Hellander-Edman, Anna
Makdoumi, Karim
Mortensen, Jes
Ekesten, Björn
author_sort Hellander-Edman, Anna
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Corneal ulcers are one of the most common eye problems in the horse and can cause varying degrees of visual impairment. Secondary infection and protease activity causing melting of the corneal stroma are always concerns in patients with corneal ulcers. Corneal collagen cross-linking (CXL), induced by illumination of the corneal stroma with ultraviolet light (UVA) after instillation of riboflavin (vitamin B2) eye drops, introduces crosslinks which stabilize melting corneas, and has been used to successfully treat infectious ulcerative keratitis in human patients. Therefore we decided to study if CXL can be performed in sedated, standing horses with ulcerative keratitis with or without stromal melting. RESULTS: Nine horses, aged 1 month to 16 years (median 5 years) were treated with a combination of CXL and medical therapy. Two horses were diagnosed with mycotic, 5 with bacterial and 2 with aseptic ulcerative keratitis. A modified Dresden-protocol for CXL could readily be performed in all 9 horses after sedation. Stromal melting, diagnosed in 4 horses, stopped within 24 h. Eight of nine eyes became fluorescein negative in 13.5 days (median time; range 4–26 days) days after CXL. One horse developed a bacterial conjunctivitis the day after CXL, which was successfully treated with topical antibiotics. One horse with fungal ulcerative keratitis and severe uveitis was enucleated 4 days after treatment due to panophthalmitis. CONCLUSIONS: CXL can be performed in standing, sedated horses. We did not observe any deleterious effects attributed to riboflavin or UVA irradiation per se during the follow-up, neither in horses with infectious nor aseptic ulcerative keratitis. These data support that CXL can be performed in the standing horse, but further studies are required to compare CXL to conventional medical treatment in equine keratitis and to optimize the CXL protocol in this species.
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spelling pubmed-37032642013-07-07 Corneal cross-linking in 9 horses with ulcerative keratitis Hellander-Edman, Anna Makdoumi, Karim Mortensen, Jes Ekesten, Björn BMC Vet Res Research Article BACKGROUND: Corneal ulcers are one of the most common eye problems in the horse and can cause varying degrees of visual impairment. Secondary infection and protease activity causing melting of the corneal stroma are always concerns in patients with corneal ulcers. Corneal collagen cross-linking (CXL), induced by illumination of the corneal stroma with ultraviolet light (UVA) after instillation of riboflavin (vitamin B2) eye drops, introduces crosslinks which stabilize melting corneas, and has been used to successfully treat infectious ulcerative keratitis in human patients. Therefore we decided to study if CXL can be performed in sedated, standing horses with ulcerative keratitis with or without stromal melting. RESULTS: Nine horses, aged 1 month to 16 years (median 5 years) were treated with a combination of CXL and medical therapy. Two horses were diagnosed with mycotic, 5 with bacterial and 2 with aseptic ulcerative keratitis. A modified Dresden-protocol for CXL could readily be performed in all 9 horses after sedation. Stromal melting, diagnosed in 4 horses, stopped within 24 h. Eight of nine eyes became fluorescein negative in 13.5 days (median time; range 4–26 days) days after CXL. One horse developed a bacterial conjunctivitis the day after CXL, which was successfully treated with topical antibiotics. One horse with fungal ulcerative keratitis and severe uveitis was enucleated 4 days after treatment due to panophthalmitis. CONCLUSIONS: CXL can be performed in standing, sedated horses. We did not observe any deleterious effects attributed to riboflavin or UVA irradiation per se during the follow-up, neither in horses with infectious nor aseptic ulcerative keratitis. These data support that CXL can be performed in the standing horse, but further studies are required to compare CXL to conventional medical treatment in equine keratitis and to optimize the CXL protocol in this species. BioMed Central 2013-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3703264/ /pubmed/23803176 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-6148-9-128 Text en Copyright © 2013 Hellander-Edman et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hellander-Edman, Anna
Makdoumi, Karim
Mortensen, Jes
Ekesten, Björn
Corneal cross-linking in 9 horses with ulcerative keratitis
title Corneal cross-linking in 9 horses with ulcerative keratitis
title_full Corneal cross-linking in 9 horses with ulcerative keratitis
title_fullStr Corneal cross-linking in 9 horses with ulcerative keratitis
title_full_unstemmed Corneal cross-linking in 9 horses with ulcerative keratitis
title_short Corneal cross-linking in 9 horses with ulcerative keratitis
title_sort corneal cross-linking in 9 horses with ulcerative keratitis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3703264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23803176
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-6148-9-128
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