In vivo confocal microscopy characteristics of equine epithelial and subepithelial nonulcerative keratomycosis.
Abstract: To describe the in vivo confocal microscopy features of horses with epithelial and subepithelial nonulcerative keratomycosis. Methods: Four horses with a clinical diagnosis of epithelial or subepithelial keratomycosis. Methods: Horses were examined on one or more occasions by in vivo laser scanning confocal microscopy of the cornea. Confocal microscopic examination characteristics were correlated with clinical, cytological, and histopathological findings for the horses. Results: All horses had an irregular corneal epithelial surface during slit-lamp biomicroscopy examination. Epithelial or subepithelial corneal opacities were present in multifocal or diffuse patterns. Positive rose bengal corneal staining was present focally or diffusely in all cases. Fungal hyphae were detected in cytological or histopathological corneal samples from all horses. Aspergillus, Fusarium, and Penicillium spp. were cultured from corneal samples. Confocal microscopy detected hyphae diffusely distributed over the axial cornea in horses with epithelial clinical disease. Fungal hyphae were present in all layers of the corneal epithelium and associated with disorganized and sloughing epithelial cells with minimal leukocytes. Subepithelial keratomycosis was correlated with focal, dense accumulations of hyphae in the immediate subepithelial anterior stroma that were surrounded by moderate numbers of leukocytes. Two horses were examined by confocal microscopy on multiple occasions during the course of medical therapy, and fungal hyphae were observed to migrate from the epithelium into the subepithelial stroma as the clinical corneal disease progressed. Conclusions: With in vivo confocal microscopy, both epithelial and subepithelial keratomycosis appear as unique clinical entities. Equine epithelial keratomycosis is a potential precursor to subepithelial keratomycosis.
© 2018 American College of Veterinary Ophthalmologists.
Publication Date: 2018-05-02 PubMed ID: 29722121DOI: 10.1111/vop.12576Google Scholar: Lookup
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- Journal Article
Summary
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This research focuses on the use of in vivo confocal microscopy to describe the characteristics of non-ulcerative keratomycosis in the epithelial and subepithelial areas of a horse’s cornea.
Research Methodology
- The study involved four horses that were clinically diagnosed with either epithelial or subepithelial keratomycosis.
- In vivo laser scanning confocal microscopy was used to examine the cornea of these horses.
- Correlations were made between confocal microscopic examination characteristics and the clinical, cytological, and histopathological findings of the horses.
Findings
- All the examined horses displayed an irregular corneal epithelial surface during slit-lamp biomicroscopy examination.
- Corneal opacities at the epithelial or subepithelial level were observed in multifocal or diffuse patterns.
- Fungal hyphae were detected in corneal samples of all the horses from cytological or histopathological examinations.
- Aspergillus, Fusarium, and Penicillium spp. were the identified fungal species cultured from the corneal samples.
- Confocal microscopy identified hyphae distributed diffusely over the axial cornea in horses with epithelial clinical disease.
- It was also observed that fungal hyphae could migrate from the epithelium into the subepithelial stroma as the clinical corneal disease progressed.
Conclusions
- In vivo confocal microscopy helped to identify both epithelial and subepithelial keratomycosis as unique clinical entities.
- The research suggests that equine epithelial keratomycosis could be a precursor to subepithelial keratomycosis.
Cite This Article
APA
Ledbetter EC, Irby NL, Teixeira LBC.
(2018).
In vivo confocal microscopy characteristics of equine epithelial and subepithelial nonulcerative keratomycosis.
Vet Ophthalmol, 22(2), 168-176.
https://doi.org/10.1111/vop.12576 Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
- Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
- Comparative Ocular Pathology Laboratory of Wisconsin, Department of Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Epithelium, Corneal / microbiology
- Epithelium, Corneal / pathology
- Eye Infections, Fungal / microbiology
- Eye Infections, Fungal / pathology
- Eye Infections, Fungal / veterinary
- Female
- Horse Diseases / microbiology
- Horse Diseases / pathology
- Horses
- Keratitis / microbiology
- Keratitis / pathology
- Keratitis / veterinary
- Male
- Microscopy, Confocal / veterinary
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