Small animal ophthalmology 3 Flashcards
Ophthalmic emergencies, ocular pharmacology
Describe the treatment of anterior lens luxation
- Surgical removal of lens
- Commonly bilateral - other eye likely to be at subluxation rather than full but still affected
- Analgesia required e.g. oral NSAID and opioid in short term
- Referral for lens removal
Give examples of corneal emergencies
- Chemical injury
- Foreign body
- Melting ulcer
- Severe lacerations
Describe the treatment of chemical corneal injuries
- Eyelid often also affected
- Immediate irrigation: tap water, saline, Hartmann’s
- Flush until pH normal (7.5), sedation likely to be necessary
- seek early specialist advice
- Medical management for corneal ulcers: alkalis may induce melting or liquefactive necrosis, intensive medical management indicated
What would constitute a corneal foreign body classing as an emergency?
Only if large and painful, urgent attention for all FBs, but most are not true emergencies
Outline the treatment of corneal foreign bodies
- Sedate/GA
- Local anaesthetic
- Use magnification and remove FB (may need referral depending on depth)
Categories corneal ulcers as either urgent or true emergencies
- Urgent: deep corneal ulcers, demetocoeles, perforated corneal ulcer, iris prolapse
- Melting ulcers are true emergencies
Describe the potential response and outcome of the iris to a perforated corneal ulcer
- Iris can come forward and plug perforation
- May get plug of fibrin
- Reduces pain
- Can be left overnight if stable, treatment may require a graft
Compare the prognosis for sharp vs blunt corneal trauma
- Sharp: better prognosis
- blunt more likely to cause splitting of globe hich then requires removal
Identify the common causes of sudden onset blindness
- Acute glaucoma
- Acute uveitis
- Intraocular haemorrhage
- Retinal detachment
- Optic neuritis
- Sudden Acquired Retinal Degeneration (SARD)
- Toxicity (ivermectin, enrofloxacin in cats)
- Intracranial lesion e.g. tumour
Discuss the use of steroids in the treatment of sudden onset blindness
- IN some, will prevent blindness, in others no difference
- e.g. optic neuritis steroids good, in SARD steroids no use - irreversible
In a case of sudden onset blindness with no visible abnormalities in the eye, what are the most likely differentials and how will you diagnose the cause?
- Optic neuritis
- SARD
- Toxicity
- Intracranial lesion
- ERG (electroretinogram) or MRI for diagnosis
Describe ophthlamic drops (formulation, duration of action, application)
- Can be solutions, suspensions, emulsions
- Short duration of action
- High frequency of application
Describe ophthalmic gels (formulation, duration of action, application)
- Liquefy on contact with ocular surface
- Longer duration of action
- Easy to apply
Describe ophthalmic ointments (formulation, duration of action, application)
- Paraffin-based/lanolin based
- Prolonged corneal contact
- Low frequency of adminstration
Compare and explain the importance of the delivery volume and retained volume of eye drops
- Delivered: 50ul, retained: 20ul
- Only give 1 drop at a time
- > 1 drop stimulates reflex tearing and dilution effect
- Allow 10-15mins between administration of different topical drugs and apply longer acting drugs last
List common topical antibacterial drugs for ophthalmic use
- Fusidic acid
- Chloramphenicol
- Fluoroquinolones
- Aminoglycosides
- Cloxacillin
Against which agents is fusidic acid effective?
- Good G+ve acitivity, esp. Staph
- Poor vs Chlamydophila felia, Pseudomonas spp.
Describe the main advantages of topical fusidic acid for ophthalmic use
- Good corneal penetration
- Gel/drop formulation, easy to use
- Once daily dosing, good owner compliance
- Licensed (Isathal)
- Good first line topical for minor ocular surface infections e.g. conjunctivitis, minor superficial ulcers
Describe the activity of topical ophthalmic chloramphenicol
- Broad spec, incl, anaerobes
- Poor vs. Chlamydophila felis, Pseudomonas
Describe the main advantages of topical ophthalmic chloramphenicol
- Good corneal penetration
- Good for ocular surface disease esp. in dogs, ocular surgery, penetrating corneal trauma
- Low toxicity to corneal epithelium, therefore good for corneal ulcers
Describe the activity of topical ophthalmic fluoroquinolones
- Broad spec
- Effective against G-ve and some G+ve
- some Staph and Strep species may be resistant
Give examples and evaluate the use of topical ophthalmic fluoroquinolones
- Ofloxacin, ciprofloxacin
- Are not first choice, used following culture and sensitivity or if presenting signs are very serious e.g. melting ulcer
Describe the activity of topical ophthalmic aminoglycosides
- Effective against G-ve and some aerobic G+ve incl. Staph spp.
- Effective against Pseudomonas
Give examples of and Evaluate the use of topical ophthalmic aminoglycosides
- Neomycin and gentamycin
- Gentamycin (clinagel, tiacil) historically for suspected Pseudomonas, epitheliotoxic to corneal epithelium, offten irritant, superseded by others
- Neomycin often in combination with topical steroid (maxitrol) drops/ointments) can cause irritancy
Describe the activity of topical ophthalmic cloxacillin
Bactericidal to beta-lactamase-resisant penicillin
Evaluate the use of topical ophthalmic cloxacillin
- Orbenin
- Topical antibiotic routinely used for IBK, readily available
- Ideally would use single long acting oxytet injection for IBK but very expensive
Describe the method and advantages of subconjunctival antibiotic injections
- Injection of drug under bulbar conjunciva
- Slow release of drug, reduces labour intensity of treatment
- Can be used with any drug
What is the most common use of subconjunctival antibiotic injections?
Penicillin g in the treatment of IBK
List the common systemic antibiotics used in the treatment of ophthalmic conditions
- Clindamycin
- Tetracyclines
- Sulphonamides
- Enrofloxacin
Describe the action of and main use for systemic clindamycin in ophthalmology
- Macrolide antibiotic, bacteriostatis
- Effective against Toxoplasma gondii e.g. Antirobe, Cleocin
Give examples of, and pros and cons of systemic tetracyclines in ophthalmology
- Doxycyline (ronaxan), oxytetracycline
- Doxy is treatment of choice for feline chlamydial infection 3 week course can eradicate)
- Can discolour teeth in young animals, not for use in pregnant queens
- Can cause oesophagitis, essential to give with water/food