Ulcerative keratitis associated with qualitative tear film abnormalities in cats

Vet Ophthalmol. 1999;2(3):197-204. doi: 10.1046/j.1463-5224.1999.00082.x.

Abstract

Three cats with indolent corneal ulcers and one cat with bilateral corneal sequestration and normal aqueous tear production were found to have rapid tear break-up times (BUTs). Tear BUTs in clinically affected cats averaged 2.5 +/- 1.29 s and 2.33 +/- 0.58 s for the right and left eyes, respectively. Palpebral conjunctival biopsies were harvested from consistent sites from each eye of affected cats (n = 7 affected eyes), and age-and breed-matched controls (n = 2 unaffected eyes). Light microscopy revealed a marked decrease to complete absence of conjunctival goblet cells (average goblet cell (GC):epithelial cell (EC) density = 18:50), conjunctival epithelial dysplasia, squamous metaplasia, and neutrophilic and mononuclear cell submucosal infiltration in affected cats. Specimens from the control cats had an average GC:EC density of 34:50, and minimal submucosal inflammatory infiltrate. The corneas (n = 7 eyes) healed following surgical keratectomy with (n = 2 eyes) or without (n = 1 eye) conjunctival pedicle flaps, superficial keratectomy and striate keratotomy with (n = 2 eyes) or without (n = 2 eyes) third eyelid flaps, and mucinomimetic tear supplementation (n = 5 eyes). Goblet cell regeneration was confirmed after 5 months of mucinomimetic supplementation (n = 2 eyes). The etiology for these mucin deficiencies remains unknown.