Abstract

Ophthalmopathy associated with parneoplastic syndrome is a poorly studied pathology of the dogs eye. They occur as a result of the malignant neoplasm’s systematic exposure on the animal's body. They appear in the form of non-specific clinical signs. Main objective of the study – to study the pathomorphological changes in the dog’s eyes with malignant neo-plasms. The material for the study were 30 eyeballs enucleated in dogs in the terminal stage of cancer. Autopsy material obtained from animals was subjected to standard histological processing. As a result of histological studies, pathomorphological changes in eyeball structures associated with Patnaik G2 and G3 mastocytomas (28.6% of cases), liver and kidney carcinomas (28.6%), lymphoma (28.6%) and spleen hemangiosarcoma (14.2%) were revealed in 46.7% of cases. The main histopathological changes were thickening of the iris due to inflammatory cellular infiltration (57.1%) and vasodilation of blood vessels (42.9%), the presence of fibrinous hemorrhagic exudate in the anterior chamber of the eye (28.6%), edema and inflammatory infiltration of the vascular membrane proper (42.9%), thinning, loss of layering and weak retinal atrophy (42.9%). The revealed histological changes indicate the predominant involvement in the pathological process of the vascular membrane of the eye with a violation of the hematophthalmic barrier, as the main pathogenetic mechanism for the development of endogenous uveitis against the background of malignant neoplasm in the animal body.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call