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Equine Conjunctivitis

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Title: Equine Conjunctivitis


1
Equine Conjunctivitis
  • October 17, 2007
  • Eric C. Ledbetter, DVM
  • Diplomate American College of Veterinary
    Ophthalmologists
  • Cornell University
  • College of Veterinary Medicine
  • Ithaca, New York, USA

2
Outline
  • Anatomy/Physiology
  • Clinical signs
  • Clinical and diagnostic examination

3
Outline
  • Etiologies
  • Diagnosis/treatment of selected etiologies

4
Conjunctival Anatomy/Physiology
  • Composed of nonkeratinized, stratified squamous
    epithelium and underlying substantia propria
  • Capable of rapid and dramatic response to insults
  • Richly supplied by blood vessels
  • Loose arrangement of conjunctival stroma
  • Resident lymphoid tissue
  • Specialized antigen-presenting cells (M-cells)

5
Conjunctival Anatomy/Physiology
  • Often secondarily involved in other intraocular,
    extraocular, and systemic diseases
  • Anatomical proximity and shared blood supply with
    other ocular structures
  • Extensive vascular/lymphoid tissue
  • Relatively accessible and observable

6
Conjunctivitis Clinical Signs
  • Conjunctivitis associated with some combination
    of the following clinical signs
  • Ocular discharge epiphora, mucoid, or
    mucopurulent
  • Chemosis edema resulting from increased
    permeability of conjunctival vessels with fluid
    extravasation
  • Hyperemia red discoloration from conjunctival
    vessel vasodilatation
  • Ocular discomfort blepharospasm, rubbing

7
Conjunctivitis Clinical Signs
  • Conjunctivitis associated with some combination
    of the following clinical signs
  • Tissue proliferation lymphatic, epithelial
    hyperplasia, or keratinization
  • Ulceration any severe conjunctivitis or those
    associated with particular etiologies (viral,
    chemical, trauma)
  • Pigmentation or depigmentation

8
Conjunctivitis Examination
  • Physical examination
  • To rule-out primary or concurrent systemic
    diseases

9
Conjunctivitis Examination
  • Complete ophthalmic examination
  • Focal light source and magnification
  • Adnexa, extraocular, and intraocular structures
  • Including Schirmer tear tests, fluorescein stain,
    tonometry
  • Examine behind nictitans membrane

10
Conjunctivitis Examination
  • Conjunctivitis diagnostics
  • Conjunctival cytology
  • Scrapings, swabs, aspirates often helpful in
    diagnosis
  • Microbiologic diagnostics
  • Cultures, PCR, IFA, etc as indicated for select
    cases where infectious etiology suspected
  • Biopsy/histopathology
  • For conjunctivitis that is severe, chronic,
    unresponsive to treatment, or associated with
    mass formation

11
Conjunctivitis Etiologies
  • Inflammation of the conjunctiva is a common
    condition and may be a
  • Primary or secondary disease process
  • Result of ocular or systemic disease

12
Conjunctivitis Etiologies
  • The conjunctiva has limited mechanisms by which
    it can respond to insults, thus the etiology of
    conjunctivitis can usually not be determined from
    clinical signs alone

13
Conjunctivitis Etiologies
  • Secondary conjunctivitis more common than primary
    in the horse
  • Secondary conjunctivitis typically occurs as a
    result of adjacent ocular inflammation or
    systemic disease
  • Intraocular disease uveitis, glaucoma
  • Extraocular disease corneal ulcers or abscesses,
    blepharitis
  • Systemic disease infectious, neoplastic,
    immune-mediated

14
Conjunctivitis Etiologies
  • The diagnosis and treatment of secondary
    conjunctivitis should be directed toward the
    underlying ocular or systemic condition

15
Secondary Conjunctivitis
Conjunctivits secondary to a corneal ulcer
Conjunctivits secondary to anterior uveitis
16
Primary Conjunctivitis Etiologies
  • Idiopathic, immune-mediated eosinophilic,
    lymphocytic
  • Allergic
  • Infectious
  • Bacterial Streptococcus equi, Moraxella equi,
    Chlamydia, etc
  • Fungal Aspergillus, Rhinosporidium,
    Histoplasmosis, Blastomycosis, Cryptococcus, etc
  • Viral Equine herpesvirus 2 and 5
  • Parasitic Onchocerciasis, Habronemiasis,
    Thelazia lacrimalis, Trypanosomiasis
  • Toxic/Chemical Stachybotryotoxicosis,
    alkali/acid burn

17
Primary Conjunctivitis Etiologies
  • Trauma blunt or penetrating
  • Frictional irritants entropion, ectopic cilia,
    distichia, foreign bodies
  • Keratoconjunctivitis sicca
  • Exposure facial nerve dysfunction, lagophthalmos
  • Actinic
  • Neoplastic

18
Eosinophilic Conjunctivitis
  • Idiopathic infiltration of conjunctiva with
    eosinophils
  • May be present with or without corneal lesions
  • Diagnosis eosinophils on cytology or
    histopathology without parasites present

19
Eosinophilic Conjunctivitis
  • Treatment
  • Topical corticosteroids or cyclosporine tapered
    to least frequent effective dose
  • Topical mast cell stabilizers (cromolyn,
    olopatadine, lodoxamide) may also be effective in
    some cases

20
Eosinophilic Conjunctivitis
Conjunctival biopsy from a horse with
eosinophilic keratoconjunctivitis displaying
numerous eosinophils
21
Lymphocytic Conjuctivitis
  • Lobulated or smooth, pink conjunctival masses
  • Composed of lymphocytes and macrophages
  • Most common locations dorsal bulbar conjunctiva
    and third eyelid

22
Lymphocytic Conjuctivitis
  • Diagnosis lymphocytic aggregates on
    cytology/histopathology
  • Treatment topical or intralesional
    corticosteroids, topical cyclosporine, or
    surgical excision

23
Lymphocytic Conjuctivitis
Conjunctival biopsy from a horse with lymphocytic
conjunctivitis displaying numerous lymphocytes
and occasional plasma cells
24
Bacterial and Fungal Conjunctivitis
  • Bacterial and fungal conjunctivitis usually
    secondary infections
  • Diagnosis based upon cytology and culture
    findings

Fungal conjunctivitis secondary to keratomycosis
25
Bacterial and Fungal Conjunctivitis
  • Treatment identify and treat underlying cause
    along with the opportunistic infection

Fungal conjunctivitis secondary to keratomycosis
26
Viral Conjunctivitis
  • Equine herpesvirus 2 and 5 may cause primary
    conjunctivitis in the horse
  • Diagnosis virus isolation, PCR, IFA
  • Treatment topical idoxuridine, trifluridine, or
    interferon

27
Viral Conjunctivitis
  • Equine viral arteritis, equine adenovirus, equine
    infectious anemia, equine influenza, and African
    horse sickness often cause mild conjunctivitis
    associated with systemic disease

28
Parasitic Conjunctivitis
  • Parasitic conjunctivitis most commonly occurs
    with Onchocerca cervicalis
  • Insect vectors Culicoides spp.
  • Larvae migration incites inflammation
  • Lesions temporolimbal conjunctival thickening,
    nodules, and depigmentation /- keratitis

29
Parasitic Conjunctivitis
  • Diagnosis conjunctival biopsy or cytology
    (microfilaria, eosinophils, lymphocytes)
  • Treatment systemic ivermectin and topical
    corticosteroids

30
Parasitic Conjunctivitis
Onchocerca limbal conjunctival nodules in a horse
Cytology of conjunctival nodules with eosinophils
and Onchocerca microfilara
31
Parasitic Conjunctivitis
  • Habronemiasis may also cause conjunctivitis
  • Habronema and Draschia spp. (equine gastric
    worms)
  • Larvae deposited on conjunctiva by flies,
    migration incites intense granulomatous or
    eosinophilc inflammation
  • Lesions proliferative nodules, granulation
    tissue appearance, may be ulcerative, may have
    yellow-white exudates (sulfur granules)
  • Occur on conjunctiva, nictitans, and periocular
    skin most commonly adjacent to medial canthus
    (where flies feed)

32
Parasitic Conjunctivitis
  • Diagnosis seasonal, clinical appearance,
    cytology/histopath
  • Treatment systemic ivermectin,
    topical/intralesional/systemic corticosteroids,
    surgical debulking for large masses

33
Parasitic Conjunctivitis
Habronemiasis sulfur granules at medial
canthus in a horse
Habronema conjunctival nodule and blepharitis in
a horse
34
Parasitic Conjunctivitis
  • Thelazia lacrimalis
  • Nematode inhabiting conjunctival fornices and
    nasolacrimal duct
  • Diagnosis identification of parasites during
    clinical examination

35
Parasitic Conjunctivitis
  • Treatment
  • Manual removal of parasites with lavage, swabs,
    or forceps
  • Systemic ivermectin or topical levamisole

36
Traumatic Conjunctivitis
  • May occur from blunt or penetrating injuries
  • Often dramatic chemosis initially
  • May be associated with subconjunctival
    hemorrhages or emphysema
  • Diagnostics exclude other ocular injuries and
    foreign bodies
  • May be difficult on initial presentation

37
Traumatic Conjunctivitis
  • Treatment
  • Most lacerations/punctures do not require sutures
    as the conjunctiva heals spontaneously and
    rapidly
  • Cold compresses acutely may decrease clinical
    signs
  • Topical antibiotics until resolved
  • Systemic antibiotics if penetrating or
    full-thickness wounds
  • Consider systemic nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories

38
Traumatic Conjunctivitis
Traumatic conjunctivitis with subconjunctival
hemorrahge
Traumatic conjunctivitis with conjunctival
emphysema
39
Actinic Conjunctivitis
  • Occurs following chronic UV-light exoposure
  • Diagnosis ulcerative conjunctivitis adjacent to
    lid margins, develops in areas of conjunctiva
    that are not pigmented

40
Actinic Conjunctivitis
  • Precursor to squamous cell carcinoma
  • Treatment shade (fly mask, stabling), monitor
    for neoplasia development

41
Conjunctival Neoplasia
  • Conjunctival neoplasia may masquerade as
    conjunctivitis initially
  • Most common types squamous cell carcinoma,
    lymphoma, hemangioma, hemangiosarcoma, papilloma,
    and melanoma
  • Diagnosis based upon excisional/incisional
    biopsy, scrapings, or aspirates

42
Conjunctival Neoplasia
  • Treatment
  • Surgical excision (always treatment of choice
    when complete excision possible)
  • Ancillary therapies often indicated based upon
    tumor type, location, extent
  • Diode laser ablation, cryotherapy, radiation,
    chemotherapy

43
Conjunctival Neoplasia
Conjunctival squamous cell carcinoma
Conjunctival lymphoma
44
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