Diamond burr debridement of 34 canine corneas with presumed corneal calcareous degeneration

Veterinary Ophthalmology
Jessica C NevileJohn Morton

Abstract

To describe the signalment, presence of systemic and/or ocular comorbidities, times to detected healing and probabilities of recurrence after diamond burr debridement (DBD) of eyes with presumed corneal calcareous degeneration and secondary ulceration and/or ocular pain. Twenty-six dogs with 42 eyes affected, 34 eyes treated with DBD. A case series was conducted using medical records from a private veterinary ophthalmology referral practice. Dogs were included if they had white or gray corneal opacity consistent with corneal calcareous degeneration with either erosive or superficial ulceration and/or ocular pain in at least one eye and had at least one such eye treated with DBD. DBD was performed with a battery-operated handheld motorized burr (The Alger Company, Inc. Lago Vista, TX, USA), and a bandage contact lens was placed in the majority of eyes (30/34). Eyes were considered healed when the cornea was fluorescein negative, and there were no signs of ocular pain. Patient data (signalment, recurrence) were extracted from medical records. Dogs were first re-examined 7-62 days after treatment (median: 13 days). All DBD-treated eyes healed within 62 days (% healed: 100%; one-sided 97.5% CI: 90-100%, median: 14 days), 82% of eye...Continue Reading

References

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May 1, 1994·Archives of Ophthalmology·M J TaravellaL D Underwood
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Jul 14, 2010·Veterinary Ophthalmology·Jane Sansom, Tony Blunden
Feb 4, 2011·Epidemiologic Perspectives & Innovations : EP+I·Joseph H Abramson

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Citations

Mar 4, 2020·The Veterinary Record·Minae KawasakiNorihiko Ito
Dec 1, 2020·American Journal of Veterinary Research·Angelie K ShuklaCathy A Bauman

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