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Veterinary Medicine Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Veterinary Toxicology and Pharmacology

University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Corneal crosslinking

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Full-Text Articles in Veterinary Medicine

Case Report: Successful Management Of Refractory Keratomycosis In An Alpaca Using Penetrating Keratoplasty And Combination Antifungal Therapy (Caspofungin 0.5% And Terbinafine 1%), Braidee C. Foote, Joseph Smith, Anna Catherine Bowden, Rachel A. Allbaugh, Lionel Sebbag Mar 2021

Case Report: Successful Management Of Refractory Keratomycosis In An Alpaca Using Penetrating Keratoplasty And Combination Antifungal Therapy (Caspofungin 0.5% And Terbinafine 1%), Braidee C. Foote, Joseph Smith, Anna Catherine Bowden, Rachel A. Allbaugh, Lionel Sebbag

Faculty Publications and Other Works -- Large Animal Clinical Sciences

Fungal keratitis is a common disease in certain parts of the world and affects several species, including equids, camelids, and homo sapiens, leading to blindness or loss of the eye if the infection is not adequately controlled. Reports of clinical use of antifungals caspofungin and terbinafine are limited across both veterinary and human medical literature. The alpaca presented in this case demonstrates that deep keratomycosis can be caused by Scopulariopsis brevicaulis and Fusarium verticillioides, two previously unreported fungi to cause keratomycosis in camelids. This report demonstrates successful management with a combination of surgery and topical ophthalmic treatment with caspofungin …