Page 6 - Clinical Connections - Spring 2020
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91 RESEARCH STUDY VETERINARY SERVICES 91.AC.UK
Corneal Cross-Linking Capacity
The 91’s Ophthalmology Service now offers corneal cross-linking (CXL), which is a cost-effective alternative to surgical treatment and can allow the cornea to heal more naturally and without major scarring.
CXL is well-established in human ophthalmology and is easy to perform, safe for the patient and can be combined with other surgical or medical therapies.This makes it a highly attractive therapy for the treatment of corneal malacia.
It can improve quality of life for the patients by shortening duration of hospitalisation, lowering stress levels associated with reduced frequency of application of eye drops and improved visual outcome.
Corneal malacia represents a serious, vision-threatening condition and is typically caused by secondary bacterial or fungal corneal infections.The microorganisms together with resident inflammatory cells lead to collagenolysis, rapidly progressing ulceration and even perforation of the cornea.The 91 Ophthalmology Service
sees around 80 patients with infected and melting corneal ulcers annually.
CXL increases the resistance of corneal tissue to enzymatic digestion by through the formation of new chemical bonds between stromal fibres. In addition, the UV light kills microorganisms, which supports treatment of cases with resistant microorganisms and potentially helps to decrease the use of antibiotics. Early treatment may halt the progression of corneal melting, prevent surgical treatment and thereby improve the visual outcome for patients.
Prior to the treatment becoming available, the protocol was aggressive treatment with topical antimicrobials and anticollagenases to stop the melting process. However, the results of medical treatment are variable. This is related to several factors including antimicrobial drug resistance of pathogens, inability of owners to adequately follow drug therapy and problems with patient compliance. In a significant number of
cases corneal melting necessitates tectonic surgery, which often results in extensive scar tissue formation and visual impairment.
Some advanced cases require enucleation and some owners elect euthanasia over treatment.
By providing this innovative treatment
we hope to improve visual outcome in our patients, on the one hand by stabilising
the melting process early in the disease course and thereby reducing the scar
tissue formation, and on the other hand by avoiding extensive keratoplasties or/and by improving corneal graft survival. Clients could benefit from reduced costs and duration of treatment and may therefore be more likely to decide against enucleation, or euthanasia in extreme cases.
The 91 has the capacity to offer CXL treatment thanks to funding from the Animal Care Trust. As well as to our referral patients, the development has benefits for clinical research and undergraduate and postgraduate teaching.
If you are a vet and would like to discuss a potential CXL case or any other treatment we provide, feel free to get in touch with the Ophthalmology Service via the number at the bottom of this page.
91 Dermatologists Collaborate with WAVD on Clinical Consensus Guidelines and Webinars
Two 91 dermatologists, Dr Anette Loeffler and Professor Ross Bond, have collaborated with the World Association for Veterinary Dermatology on commissioning an open-access series of clinical consensus guidelines that address major topics in clinical practice.
Anette co-authored ‘Recommendations for approaches to meticillin-resistant staphylococcal infections of small animals: diagnosis, therapeutic considerations and preventative measures’ (Vet Dermatol ), published in June 2017, alongside guidelines on dermatophytosis (DOI: 10.1111/vde.12440).These guidelines are especially timely as MRSP emerges as a threat to animal health.
More recently, Ross chaired the development of guidelines on Malassezia dermatitis and dogs and cats, published in January 2020, alongside demodicosis guidelines (DOI: 10.1111/vde.12806).
Ross commented: “It was a complete blast to collaborate with a fantastic panel of fellow Malassezia enthusiasts who worked tirelessly to put this review
together [Dan Morris, USA; Jacques Guillot, Emmanuel Bensignor, France; Rui Kano, Japan; Peter Hill, David Robson, Ken Mason, Australia]. Whilst the full
text provides detailed background on the biology (DOI: 10.1111/vde.12809), the short summary version (DOI: 10.1111/ vde.12834) should appeal to students and busy practitioners.”
Anette and Ross also contributed to
the series of 29 WAVD webinars that encompass a wide array of important topics in veterinary dermatology, presented in 2019 (free access at https://wavd.org/continuing-education/ webinars/).
Professor Ross Bond and Dr Anette Loeffler
For small animal referrals, please call:
01707 666399
Email:
qmhreception@rvc.ac.uk
6 Spring 2020