 Vital Stats
|
A 9-year-old male neutered domestic shorthaired cat was referred to The Veterinary Eye Clinic in Wheat Ridge, Colo., for evaluation
of acute, progressive uveitis in both eyes and glaucoma in the right eye. The cat went outside occasionally to hunt. It had
no known history of trauma or travel and was receiving no medications, and its vaccination status was current for feline viral
rhinotracheitis, calicivirus infection, panleukopenia, and rabies.
HISTORY
One month before referral, the cat had been presented to an emergency clinic because of acute hyphema in the right eye and
uveitis in both eyes. The cat was mildly lethargic, and its temperature was 102.4 F. The intraocular pressure (IOP) was 16
mm Hg in both eyes (normal = 15 to 35 mm Hg).1 Trauma was suspected, and one drop of prednisone acetate was prescribed for use in both eyes four times a day.
The referring veterinarian saw the cat for a recheck examination two days later, and the IOP was 45 mm Hg in the right eye
and 5 mm Hg in the left eye. Hyphema had developed in the left eye, and hypopyon was present in the right eye. Neither eye
had fluorescein stain uptake. The cat had also become more lethargic and exhibited inappetence.
A serum chemistry profile had revealed a high normal globulin concentration (5.4 g/dl; reference range = 2.8 to 5.4 g/dl).
A complete blood count had shown a mild lymphocytosis (9,860/µl; reference range = 400 to 6,800/µl). The cat's blood pressure
was normal, and a thoracic radiographic examination revealed no abnormalities. The results of feline immunodeficiency virus
(FIV) and feline leukemia virus (FeLV) tests (SNAP FIV/FeLV Combo—Idexx) were negative.
Trauma, infectious disease, or idiopathic uveitis with secondary glaucoma were the top differential diagnoses. Treatment prescribed
by the referring veterinarian included intravenous mannitol (1 g/kg) administered over 30 minutes and subcutaneous triamcinolone
acetonide (0.25 mg/kg given once). A topical carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, dorzolamide (one drop in each eye twice a day),
and oral prednisolone (1 mg/kg once a day) were also prescribed, and the cat was discharged.
Over the next 20 days, the IOP in the right eye decreased and the cat's ocular pain seemed to diminish. However, on a recheck
21 days after initial presentation, the IOP was 37 mm Hg in the right eye and 8 mm Hg in the left eye. The patient had become
blind in right eye and had bilateral uveitis. The pupils had become irregularly shaped because of posterior synechiae (adhesions
between the iris and the anterior lens capsule).2 The cat also exhibited inappetence. The cat was then referred to a veterinary ophthalmologist.
OCULAR EXAMINATION
 1. The cat's right eye exhibited buphthalmos, and the left pupil was irregularly shaped.
|
The initial ocular examination at The Veterinary Eye Clinic revealed that the right eye was blind and had buphthalmos with
iris bombé and posterior synechiae (Figure 1). (Iris bombé occurs when there is forward bowing of the iris and synechiae that seal the iris to the lens so aqueous humor
cannot pass through the pupil into the anterior chamber.) The base of the iris had obstructed the filtration angle because
of forward bowing of the iris, causing obstructive glaucoma.3 Fibrin and a blood clot were present in the right pupil (Figure 2). Ulcerative keratitis had developed, likely from exposure, in the right eye. Pars planitis (inflammation of the posterior
portion of the ciliary body) was also evident.