DESCRIPTION:
Successful management of eye disease relies on the veterinarian""s ability to identify ocular features and distinguish pathologic changes. Atlas of Feline Ophthalmology, Second Edition is an invaluable diagnostic reference, providing high-quality color photographs for comparison with a presenting complaint. Presenting 394 photographs illustrating both normal and pathologic ocular conditions, this Second Edition offers a current, complete reference on ocular diseases, adding conditions recognized since publication of the first edition, a broader geographic scope, and many new images with improved quality.
Carefully designed for easy reference, the contents are divided into sections corresponding to specific anatomical structures of the eye. A useful appendix new to this edition groups figures by etiology, making it easy to find every image associated with a specific agent or disease. Atlas of Feline Ophthalmology, Second Edition is a useful tool aiding general practitioners in diagnosing eye disease in cats.
CONTENTS:
I. NORMAL EYE FIGURE
A. Diagrams
B. Normal adnexa/anterior segment
C. Normal fundus
II. GLOBE-ORBIT RELATIONSHIP
A. Convergent strabismus
B. Enophthalmos
C. Proptosis
D. Orbitalmucocele
III. ADNEXA
A. Eyelid agenesis
B. Entropion
C. Ectropion
D. Distichiasis
E. Blepharitis
F. Apocrine cystadenoma
G. Chalazion
H. Lipogranulomatous conjunctivitis
I. Granuloma/Histoplasmosis
J. Neoplasia
IV. CONJUNCTIVA
A. Dermoid
B. Symblepharon
C. Conjunctivitis
D. Dacryocystitis
E. Neoplasia
V. NICTITATING MEMBRANE
A. Nictitans protrusion
B. Eosinophilic conjunctivitis
C. Neoplasia
VI. CORNEA
A. Corneal opacities
B. Congenital Endothelial Dysfunction
C. Keratoconus
D. Manx dystrophy
E. Infectious keratitis
F. Ulcerative keratitis
G. Corneal Laceration
H. Eosinophilic keratitis
I. Corneal sequestration
J. Foreign body
K. Staphyloma
L. Neoplasia
VII. ANTERIOR UVEA
A. Dyscorias
B. Persistent pupillary membranes
D. Chediak-Higashi syndrome
E. Iris atrophy
F. Dysautonomia
G. Iris cysts/Iridocilary cysts
H. Anterior uveitis
VIII. GLAUCOMA
A. Congenital/Goniodysgenesis
B. Inherited/Primary Open Angle Glaucoma (POAG)
C. Feline Aqueous Humor Misdirection Syndrome (FAHMS)
D. Secondary
IX. LENS
A. Senile nuclear sclerosis
B. Cataract
C. Cataract classification by involvement
D. Encephalitozoon cuniculi
E. Lens luxation
X. VITREOUS
A. Persistent hyaloid
B. Vitreous hemorrhage
C. Hyalitis
XI. RETINA AND CHOROID
A. Congenital
B. Chorioretinitis-Infectious
C. Chorioretinitis-Traumatic
D. Hypertensive retinopathy
E. Retinal detachment
F. Retinal folds
G. Retinopathy
H. Vascular changes
I. Neoplasia
XII. OPTIC NERVE
A. Coloboma
B. Optic disc hypoplasia
C. Optic disc aplasia
D. Optic neuritis
E. Optic nerve atrophy
F. Glaucoma
G. Neoplasia