Dacryoendoscopy for dacryocystitis management in a dog: A case report

Abstract A castrated, mixed‐breed, 10‐year‐old male dog developed a skin fistula from a ruptured periorbital swelling on the right eye; the patient was successfully treated with dacryoendoscope‐guided cannulation using a nasolacrimal tube. On presentation, computed tomography with concurrent dacryoc...

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Main Authors: Yeon‐Hyung Choi, Je‐Hwan Jang, Joon‐Young Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-05-01
Series:Veterinary Medicine and Science
Subjects:
dog
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/vms3.410
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spelling doaj-6b7892161a0345b99938835b64a5d0a02021-05-20T18:47:35ZengWileyVeterinary Medicine and Science2053-10952021-05-017367467910.1002/vms3.410Dacryoendoscopy for dacryocystitis management in a dog: A case reportYeon‐Hyung Choi0Je‐Hwan Jang1Joon‐Young Kim2Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital Konkuk University Seoul KoreaDepartment of Veterinary Ophthalmology College of Veterinary Medicine Konkuk University Seoul KoreaDepartment of Veterinary Ophthalmology College of Veterinary Medicine Konkuk University Seoul KoreaAbstract A castrated, mixed‐breed, 10‐year‐old male dog developed a skin fistula from a ruptured periorbital swelling on the right eye; the patient was successfully treated with dacryoendoscope‐guided cannulation using a nasolacrimal tube. On presentation, computed tomography with concurrent dacryocystography (CT‐DCG) revealed obstruction of the right nasolacrimal duct and abnormal flow of contrast agents towards the root of tooth 109 at the right maxillary bone; however, the origin of the fistula remained unclear on CT‐DCG. Dacryoendoscopy was used to confirm the physical association between the fistula and the nasolacrimal duct; the fistula end was found to be near the right upper gum mucosa around tooth 107. CT‐DCG and dacryoendoscopy revealed that the periorbital swelling occurred owing to an infection or inflammation of the accessory nasolacrimal duct. The fistula end was connected to the oral cavity through a nasolacrimal tube installed in the oral mucosa. The tube was removed a week later, and the clinical symptoms completely resolved.https://doi.org/10.1002/vms3.410Dacryocystitisdacryocystographydacryoendoscopydogfistula
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yeon‐Hyung Choi
Je‐Hwan Jang
Joon‐Young Kim
spellingShingle Yeon‐Hyung Choi
Je‐Hwan Jang
Joon‐Young Kim
Dacryoendoscopy for dacryocystitis management in a dog: A case report
Veterinary Medicine and Science
Dacryocystitis
dacryocystography
dacryoendoscopy
dog
fistula
author_facet Yeon‐Hyung Choi
Je‐Hwan Jang
Joon‐Young Kim
author_sort Yeon‐Hyung Choi
title Dacryoendoscopy for dacryocystitis management in a dog: A case report
title_short Dacryoendoscopy for dacryocystitis management in a dog: A case report
title_full Dacryoendoscopy for dacryocystitis management in a dog: A case report
title_fullStr Dacryoendoscopy for dacryocystitis management in a dog: A case report
title_full_unstemmed Dacryoendoscopy for dacryocystitis management in a dog: A case report
title_sort dacryoendoscopy for dacryocystitis management in a dog: a case report
publisher Wiley
series Veterinary Medicine and Science
issn 2053-1095
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract A castrated, mixed‐breed, 10‐year‐old male dog developed a skin fistula from a ruptured periorbital swelling on the right eye; the patient was successfully treated with dacryoendoscope‐guided cannulation using a nasolacrimal tube. On presentation, computed tomography with concurrent dacryocystography (CT‐DCG) revealed obstruction of the right nasolacrimal duct and abnormal flow of contrast agents towards the root of tooth 109 at the right maxillary bone; however, the origin of the fistula remained unclear on CT‐DCG. Dacryoendoscopy was used to confirm the physical association between the fistula and the nasolacrimal duct; the fistula end was found to be near the right upper gum mucosa around tooth 107. CT‐DCG and dacryoendoscopy revealed that the periorbital swelling occurred owing to an infection or inflammation of the accessory nasolacrimal duct. The fistula end was connected to the oral cavity through a nasolacrimal tube installed in the oral mucosa. The tube was removed a week later, and the clinical symptoms completely resolved.
topic Dacryocystitis
dacryocystography
dacryoendoscopy
dog
fistula
url https://doi.org/10.1002/vms3.410
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AT jehwanjang dacryoendoscopyfordacryocystitismanagementinadogacasereport
AT joonyoungkim dacryoendoscopyfordacryocystitismanagementinadogacasereport
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