1 / 10

Moon Blindness Equine Recurrent Uveitis

Moon Blindness Equine Recurrent Uveitis. By Ann Wielenberg. History. “ Nemo ” 6 year old Gelding Leopard Appaloosa 1 of 5 horses in family Loose on 10 acres with a small stream running through the property Has not had vaccines in a few years. History cont….

berg
Download Presentation

Moon Blindness Equine Recurrent Uveitis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Moon Blindness Equine Recurrent Uveitis By Ann Wielenberg

  2. History • “Nemo” • 6 year old Gelding • Leopard Appaloosa • 1 of 5 horses in family • Loose on 10 acres with a small stream running through the property • Has not had vaccines in a few years

  3. History cont… • Fed on pasture, alfalfa and oats • Open shed available for shelter • Hasn’t been coming out of the shed to eat during the day, will only come out at night • Has puffy, watering eyes and is squinting. Has red blood vessels at the sides of the eye, is shaking his head, runny nose, eye boogers, rubbing the eyes, clouding of the cornea, running into side of shed • Symptoms and behavior only notice in this horse and not other 4

  4. PE Findings • Upon physical examination vitals were all within normal limits • Body condition: Slight weight loss from in-appetance • Coat: Normal • Motion: Normal • Feet: No problems found

  5. PE Findings cont… • Head: upon exam of eyesInflammation of the eyesDiscoloration of irisConstriction of pupilsClouding of the corneaDischarge from the eyeBleeding in the eyeHorse had balance issuesHorse spooked easily when approached

  6. Possible diagnosis • Allergies: allergy testing • Corneal ulcers: flourescene dye • Conjunctivitis: opthalmoscope • Glaucoma: tonometer • Foreign bodies: opthalmoscope • Examine eye lids: topical anesthetic • Trauma: ocular ultrasound • ERU (Equine RecurrantUveitis) – Serum for titration for Leptospirosus

  7. Diagnosis • After a full exam of the eyes using above tests all other possibilites ruled out. • A serum sample send in indicated Leptospirosisand other bacteria. Tested for lepto and other bacteria.

  8. Treatments • Topical steroid ointments: To help decrease inflammation and minimize the immune-mediated response. • Topical NSAIDS: Help decrease inflammation. • Topical atropine ointment: To dilate the pupil which decreases pain. • Systemic NSAIDS: To help decrease inflammation. • Systemic corticosteroids: A more potent method of calming the inflammatory response

  9. Causes & Prevention • Can be caused by bacteria, viral, parasites or traumatic injury. • Horse has bacterial lepto and ERU • For Nemo, start with deworming (Ivermectin) & Antibiotics (Bute) • To help with prevention: can’t prevent completely but vaccines & dewormer • Relocate horse

  10. The End

More Related