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1.
Vet Ophthalmol ; 2023 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37526040

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess whether gonioscopy performed on Samoyed puppies (6-14 weeks of age) is a reliable predictor of their gonioscopy results as adults (>11 months of age). PROCEDURE: A retrospective medical record search was performed to identify Samoyed dogs that had undergone gonioscopy as a puppy (6-14 weeks of age). A second prospective gonioscopy examination was performed as an adult (>11 months of age) and the results were compared. Gonioscopy was assessed on two characteristics: percent of iridocorneal angle (ICA) unaffected by pectinate ligament abnormalities (PLA) and ICA width, with PLA results categorized into unaffected ( ≥ $$ \ge $$ 75% open), moderately affected (50%-74% open), and severely affected (<50% open) and the width categorized into wide, moderate, narrow, and closed groups. A multivariate model was created that considered factors such as PLA, angle width, sex, puppy age, neuter status, and time between examinations. RESULTS: The eyes of 77 Samoyed dogs (154 eyes) met inclusion criteria. When assessing PLA, 90% of dogs had the same categorization as a puppy and as an adult. When assessing ICA width, 53.2% of dogs had the same width classification as a puppy and as an adult. There is strong evidence that variation between puppy and adult results increases with time between examination (p = .03). CONCLUSION: Puppies unaffected by PLA and with a wide ICA angle, are likely to retain these features as adults. Selection of puppies with desirable gonioscopic traits may help breeders to choose dogs likely to retain these traits as adults for breeding. This may reduce the incidence of glaucoma in the breed. Puppy examinations should be performed in both eyes. Examination of adults prior to breeding remains prudent.

2.
Open Vet J ; 12(6): 822-829, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36650862

ABSTRACT

Background: Glaucoma is a painful and blinding condition that occurs in many species, including rabbits. When medication is no longer effective in maintaining intraocular pressure (IOP), enucleation is the recognized treatment for rabbits with end-stage glaucoma. However, this procedure carries risks relating to the procedure and the anesthesia. Aim: The aim of this retrospective study was to report the efficacy of intravitreal gentamicin injection in controlling IOP in blind eyes of rabbits with end-stage glaucoma. Ocular and non-ocular complications were retrospectively assessed. Methods: Medical record review was performed to identify five client-owned rabbits (eight eyes) that were treated by intravitreal injection of 6-20 mg of gentamicin per eye (median 7.18 mg/kg) for chronic, end-stage glaucoma. Treatment was unilateral in two and bilateral in three rabbits. IOP control was assessed via rebound tonometry readings performed approximately 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months after injection. Total follow-up was between 313 and 1,111 days. Ocular complications were recorded and systemic health was estimated by the owner-answered questionnaire and changes in body weight. Results: IOP was <25 mmHg in 87.5% of eyes 3 months post-injection. The most common ocular complications were cataracts (62.5%), anterior uveitis (25%), retinal detachment (12.5%), and corneal erosion (12.5%). There were no behavioral or body weight changes suggestive of systemic complications. Conclusion: 87.5% of rabbit eyes treated with intravitreal gentamicin had controlled IOP 3 months after injection. All eyes were blind at the time of injection. Ocular side effects were common. Investigation of the safety and systemic effects of intravitreal gentamicin injection is required; however, no overt complications were identified in treated rabbits in this study.


Subject(s)
Gentamicins , Glaucoma , Rabbits , Animals , Intravitreal Injections/veterinary , Gentamicins/therapeutic use , Retrospective Studies , Glaucoma/drug therapy , Glaucoma/veterinary , Glaucoma/complications , Intraocular Pressure
3.
J Appl Ecol ; 53(1): 171-180, 2016 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27570258

ABSTRACT

Restoration and maintenance of habitat diversity have been suggested as conservation priorities in farmed landscapes, but how this should be achieved and at what scale are unclear. This study makes a novel comparison of the effectiveness of three wildlife-friendly farming schemes for supporting local habitat diversity and species richness on 12 farms in England.The schemes were: (i) Conservation Grade (Conservation Grade: a prescriptive, non-organic, biodiversity-focused scheme), (ii) organic agriculture and (iii) a baseline of Entry Level Stewardship (Entry Level Stewardship: a flexible widespread government scheme). Conservation Grade farms supported a quarter higher habitat diversity at the 100-m radius scale compared to Entry Level Stewardship farms. Conservation Grade and organic farms both supported a fifth higher habitat diversity at the 250-m radius scale compared to Entry Level Stewardship farms. Habitat diversity at the 100-m and 250-m scales significantly predicted species richness of butterflies and plants. Habitat diversity at the 100-m scale also significantly predicted species richness of birds in winter and solitary bees. There were no significant relationships between habitat diversity and species richness for bumblebees or birds in summer.Butterfly species richness was significantly higher on organic farms (50% higher) and marginally higher on Conservation Grade farms (20% higher), compared with farms in Entry Level Stewardship. Organic farms supported significantly more plant species than Entry Level Stewardship farms (70% higher) but Conservation Grade farms did not (10% higher). There were no significant differences between the three schemes for species richness of bumblebees, solitary bees or birds. Policy implications. The wildlife-friendly farming schemes which included compulsory changes in management, Conservation Grade and organic, were more effective at increasing local habitat diversity and species richness compared with the less prescriptive Entry Level Stewardship scheme. We recommend that wildlife-friendly farming schemes should aim to enhance and maintain high local habitat diversity, through mechanisms such as option packages, where farmers are required to deliver a combination of several habitats.

4.
Mitochondrial DNA A DNA Mapp Seq Anal ; 27(6): 3975-3976, 2016 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25627318

ABSTRACT

Bees are one of the most well-known and important type of pollinators in agriculture and natural ecosystems, and maintaining their diversity in nature is essential. In this study, we report the complete mitochondrial genome of Hylaeus dilatatus, the first mitochondrial genome of Colletidae. Its complete mtDNA sequence is 15,475 bp in length, which contains 13 protein-coding genes, 22 transfer RNA genes, two ribosomal RNA genes and one control region. The base composition of mtDNA is 44.27% A, 41.52% T, 8.80% C and 5.41% G. The percentage of A + T is 85.79%. The first complete mitogenome of Colletidae family could be used in studies of molecular systematics, conservation genetics, and stock evaluation.


Subject(s)
Gene Order , Genes, Mitochondrial , Genome, Mitochondrial , Hymenoptera/genetics , Animals , Base Composition , Evolution, Molecular , Genome Size , Genome, Insect , Sequence Analysis, DNA
5.
Methods Ecol Evol ; 6(9): 1034-1043, 2015 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27867467

ABSTRACT

Bee populations and other pollinators face multiple, synergistically acting threats, which have led to population declines, loss of local species richness and pollination services, and extinctions. However, our understanding of the degree, distribution and causes of declines is patchy, in part due to inadequate monitoring systems, with the challenge of taxonomic identification posing a major logistical barrier. Pollinator conservation would benefit from a high-throughput identification pipeline.We show that the metagenomic mining and resequencing of mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomics) can be applied successfully to bulk samples of wild bees. We assembled the mitogenomes of 48 UK bee species and then shotgun-sequenced total DNA extracted from 204 whole bees that had been collected in 10 pan-trap samples from farms in England and been identified morphologically to 33 species. Each sample data set was mapped against the 48 reference mitogenomes.The morphological and mitogenomic data sets were highly congruent. Out of 63 total species detections in the morphological data set, the mitogenomic data set made 59 correct detections (93·7% detection rate) and detected six more species (putative false positives). Direct inspection and an analysis with species-specific primers suggested that these putative false positives were most likely due to incorrect morphological IDs. Read frequency significantly predicted species biomass frequency (R2 = 24·9%). Species lists, biomass frequencies, extrapolated species richness and community structure were recovered with less error than in a metabarcoding pipeline.Mitogenomics automates the onerous task of taxonomic identification, even for cryptic species, allowing the tracking of changes in species richness and distributions. A mitogenomic pipeline should thus be able to contain costs, maintain consistently high-quality data over long time series, incorporate retrospective taxonomic revisions and provide an auditable evidence trail. Mitogenomic data sets also provide estimates of species counts within samples and thus have potential for tracking population trajectories.

6.
Vet Ophthalmol ; 17(5): 351-7, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23910215

ABSTRACT

Conjunctival lymphoma is well documented in the medical literature, but veterinary reports are few. We report five cases of canine lymphoma, and three of feline in which the presenting sign was conjunctival involvement. All animals were in apparently good health at the time of presentation, and attended the referring clinic because of conjunctival disease. One dog showed generalized lymphadenopathy at presentation, although the ocular lesion was the reason for consultation, but all other patients were well with no detectable disease beyond the eye. All cats were presented for their ocular disease. All dogs were confirmed to have T-cell tumors, although the histological appearance of these was variable. In contrast, all cats had B-cell tumors. Referring clinicians and owners were contacted for follow-up information. Three dogs had been euthanased within 6 months of diagnosis for deterioration of general health. The remaining two were alive and showed no signs of systemic disease. Two cats had good survival following diagnosis, the other died of lesions that may not be related.


Subject(s)
Cat Diseases/diagnosis , Conjunctival Neoplasms/veterinary , Dog Diseases/diagnosis , Lymphoma/veterinary , Animals , Cat Diseases/pathology , Cat Diseases/therapy , Cats , Conjunctival Neoplasms/diagnosis , Diagnosis, Differential , Dog Diseases/pathology , Dog Diseases/therapy , Dogs , Female , Immunohistochemistry/veterinary , Lymphoma/diagnosis , Male
7.
Vet Ophthalmol ; 15(4): 231-5, 2012 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22129140

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the success rate of various surgical techniques for the management of lower eyelid entropion in cats. DESIGN: Retrospective study. Animals studied One hundred and twenty-four cats with surgical correction of lower eyelid entropion of 200 eyes over a 13 year period. METHODS: Records of 124 cats were reviewed for signalment, type of entropion, surgical procedure performed and post-operative result. RESULTS: Combinations of the Hotz-Celsus (HC), lateral canthal closure and full thickness wedge resection techniques were used to treat 64 bilateral and 60 unilateral cases of lower lid entropion. Twenty-three cats were under a year of age, 52 cats were aged between 2 and 8 years and 49 were over 8 years old. The overall success rate for a single surgical procedure (which may consist of multiple techniques) to correct lower eyelid entropion was 96.0% per eye. The remaining 4.0% had the entropion resolved with a second surgery. A combined HC and lateral canthal closure had a 99.21% success rate of resolving lower lid entropion. Geriatric cats were the most likely age group to develop corneal sequestra; 37% of cats in this group presented with entropion and corneal sequestra concurrently. Seventeen percent of cats that presented with unilateral entropion and did not have prophylactic surgery on the fellow eye went on to develop entropion in the fellow eye. CONCLUSIONS: A combined HC and lateral canthal closure was the most effective surgical technique in managing lower eyelid entropion of cats in our study. Prophylactic lateral canthal closure in the unaffected eye is recommended.


Subject(s)
Cat Diseases/surgery , Entropion/veterinary , Eyelids/pathology , Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures/veterinary , Animals , Cats , Entropion/surgery , Retrospective Studies , Treatment Outcome
8.
Vet Ophthalmol ; 14(5): 292-5, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21929605

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To estimate mean Schirmer tear test (STT) and intraocular pressure (IOP) values in healthy koalas both conscious and anesthetized. METHODS: Data were gathered from koalas in Victoria, Australia. Conscious examinations were performed on captive koalas. Free-ranging (wild) koalas were examined under anesthesia. Anesthesia was induced using alfaxalone, and animals were maintained on oxygen and isoflurane if required. All animals were healthy and had no surface ocular pathology detectable during slit lamp biomicroscopy. STT I tests were performed using commercial STT test strips placed in the lower fornix for 1 min. IOP was measured using an applanation tonometer after topical anesthesia. The higher value of the two eyes for both STT and IOP was analyzed. STT was measured in 53 koalas (34 conscious, 19 anesthetized) and IOP was measured in 43 koalas (30 conscious, 13 anesthetized). A two-sample t-test was used to compare means. A P-value <0.05 was regarded as significant. Mean ± SD is presented. RESULTS: The mean higher STT in conscious koalas was 10.3 ± 3.6 mm wetting/min and in anesthetized koalas it decreased to 3.8 ± 4.0 mm wetting/min (P < 0.0001). The mean higher IOP in conscious koalas was 15.3 ± 5.1 mmHg, and in anesthetized koalas it was 13.8 ± 3.4 mmHg (P = 0.32). There was no effect of sex on either STT or IOP. CONCLUSIONS: The mean and SD of STT and IOP values for koalas both conscious and anesthetized were reported. The mean STT was significantly reduced by alfaxalone anesthesia.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia/veterinary , Anesthetics/pharmacology , Intraocular Pressure/physiology , Phascolarctidae , Animals , Female , Male , Reference Values
9.
Vet Ophthalmol ; 14(4): 271-4, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21733070

ABSTRACT

A case of a traumatic scleral rupture with uveal herniation in a dog was treated with an autogenous fascia lata graft. Placement of the graft resolved the uveal prolapse and resulted in return of strength and a more normal structure. Fascia lata appears to be an effective scaffolding graft for the repair of scleral defects. It is cheap, easily harvested and large grafts may be obtained. Healing was rapid and the end result was a cosmetic, comfortable, fully functional eye.


Subject(s)
Dog Diseases/surgery , Sclera/injuries , Tissue Transplantation/veterinary , Animals , Dogs , Fascia Lata , Female
10.
Vet Ophthalmol ; 13(5): 331-5, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20840112

ABSTRACT

A 2-year-old Jack Russell Terrier was presented for treatment of a worsening corneal ulcer and keratomalacia following removal of a vegetative foreign body. The keratomalacia responded to topical gentamicin therapy; however, the eye became suddenly painful and at examination two areas of increased opacity had developed. Fungal keratitis was demonstrated by corneal scrape showing branching, septate fungal hyphae. Treatment with 1% voriconazole was effective in resolving the keratomycosis.


Subject(s)
Antifungal Agents/therapeutic use , Dog Diseases/drug therapy , Eye Infections, Fungal/veterinary , Pyrimidines/therapeutic use , Triazoles/therapeutic use , Administration, Topical , Animals , Antifungal Agents/administration & dosage , Dogs , Eye Infections, Fungal/drug therapy , Male , Pyrimidines/administration & dosage , Triazoles/administration & dosage , Voriconazole
11.
J Feline Med Surg ; 11(2): 82-90, 2009 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18667349

ABSTRACT

Primary lipid disorders causing fasting triglyceridaemia have been documented infrequently in Burmese cats. Due to the known increased risk of diabetes mellitus and sporadic reports of lipid aqueous in this breed, the aim of this study was to determine whether healthy Burmese cats displayed a more pronounced pre- or post-prandial triglyceridaemia compared to other cats. Serum triglyceride (TG) concentrations were determined at baseline and variably at 2, 4 and 6h after ingestion of a high-fat meal (ie, an oral fat tolerance test) in a representative sample of Burmese and non-Burmese cats. The median 4 and 6h serum TG concentrations were significantly higher in Burmese cats (4h - 2.8mmol/l; 6h - 8.2mmol/l) than in other pedigree and domestic crossbred cats (4h - 1.5mmol/l; 6h - 1.0mmol/l). The non-Burmese group had post-prandial TG concentrations ranging from 0.6 to 3.9mmol/l. Seven Burmese cats had post-prandial TG concentrations between 6.6 and 19.0mmol/l, five had concentrations between 4.2 and 4.7mmol/l, while the remaining 15 had post-prandial concentrations between 0.5 and 2.8mmol/l. None of these Burmese cats had fasting triglyceridaemia. Most Burmese cats with a 4 h TG > 6.0 mmol/l had elevated fasting very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) concentrations. This study demonstrates that a proportion of Burmese cats in Australia have delayed TG clearance compared to other cats. The potential repercussions of this observation with reference to lipid aqueous, pancreatitis and diabetes mellitus in Burmese cats are discussed.


Subject(s)
Cat Diseases/blood , Dietary Fats/administration & dosage , Hypertriglyceridemia/veterinary , Triglycerides/blood , Administration, Oral , Animals , Aqueous Humor/metabolism , Breeding , Cat Diseases/genetics , Cats , Electrophoresis/veterinary , Eye Diseases/genetics , Eye Diseases/veterinary , Fasting/blood , Female , Hypertriglyceridemia/blood , Hypertriglyceridemia/genetics , Lipid Metabolism/genetics , Male , New South Wales
12.
Vet Ophthalmol ; 6(2): 127-30, 2003 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12753613

ABSTRACT

A 6-month-old Rhodesian ridgeback-cross, a 6-year-old Chihuahua and a 12-month-old Australian cattle dog were presented to the authors with a history of colliding with obstacles in daylight. Ophthalmic examination was normal and all three dogs successfully negotiated obstacle courses in dim light. In daylight the dogs became suddenly blind and repeatedly collided with obstacles. Elecroretinography (ERG) revealed no retinal activity to high frequency (30 Hz), bright intensity blue light retinal stimulation by any dog, confirming cone dysfunction. Achromatopsia has previously been recorded in Alaskan malamutes and miniature poodles. This clinical case series illustrates the characteristic behavioral presentation and the electroretinographic findings of severe day-blindness and demonstrates that this condition may exist in other breeds of dogs.


Subject(s)
Color Vision Defects/veterinary , Dog Diseases/diagnosis , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Color Vision Defects/diagnosis , Diagnosis, Differential , Dog Diseases/pathology , Dogs , Electroretinography/veterinary , Female , Male
14.
Vet Ophthalmol ; 5(3): 227-30, 2002 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12236877

ABSTRACT

A 16-month-old, male, neuter Dwarf Lop rabbit presented with exophthalmos of the right eye of 3 weeks duration. Under sedation an ultrasound of the right eye was performed and showed an orbital hypo-echoic area posterior and ventrolateral to the right globe, which was presumed to be a cyst. Fine needle aspirate removed 5.5 mLs of straw-colored fluid from the cyst, which allowed the globe to return to its normal position. Two months later the rabbit re-presented with exophthalmos of the right eye. Exploratory surgery was performed and a large cystic structure was removed from the ventro-lateral conjunctival fornix. Histology confirmed the cyst to be a coenurus of Taenia serialis.


Subject(s)
Cysticercosis/veterinary , Exophthalmos/veterinary , Eye Infections, Parasitic/veterinary , Rabbits , Animals , Animals, Domestic , Cysticercosis/complications , Cysticercosis/diagnosis , Cysticercosis/surgery , Diagnosis, Differential , Exophthalmos/diagnosis , Exophthalmos/diagnostic imaging , Exophthalmos/etiology , Exophthalmos/pathology , Eye Infections, Parasitic/complications , Eye Infections, Parasitic/diagnosis , Eye Infections, Parasitic/surgery , Male , Taenia/isolation & purification , Ultrasonography
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