4/20/2007

YAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!



"ALL YOU NEED IS A STRONG STOMACH AND A MELON-BALLER!"

WARNING: THE FOLLOWING SURGICAL IMAGES ARE PROVIDED FOR THE PURPOSE OF EDUCATION AND ENTERTAINMENT. SOME MAY FIND THE IMAGES QUITE DISTURBING. SOME MAY FIND THE IMAGES QUITE FASCINATING.

First of all, I'd like to thank Ms. Vackar and her cat "Bella" for allowing me to share our experience with my blog fans. I hope Ms. Vackar has a really good sense of humor!

"Bella" was diagnosed with uveitis (inflammation of the globe of the eye) with a resultant glaucoma (increased pressure inside the eye). Glaucoma is really painful and the specialist described the pain as "having a bad migrane headache". Because "Bella" has some degree of kidney disease, the medication used to treat glaucoma shouldn't be used if there are other alternatives. The only other choice was enucleation (removal of the eye). Bella was already permanently blind in her bad eye and the eye was only serving as a source of pain. Ms. Vackar chose enucleation.

The following pictures were taken during the surgery.


Fig. 1 - Preparation of the surgical site.


Fig. 2 - Removal of the conjunctiva and 3rd eyelid


Fig. 3 - elevation of the globe from the socket


Fig.4 - Optic nerve under the globe being tied off


Fig. 5 - Empty eye socket after removal of the globe


Fig. 6 - Trimming of the eyelids to create a smooth surface after healing


Fig. 7 - Surgical site after removal was complete!

It will take up to a week for the swelling to resolve. Sutures will be removed 10 days after the procedure and the hair will eventually grow over the site. I will post an update photo of "Bella" in a few weeks. :)

Dr. C

Comments:
AWESOME!!! Who gets to keep the eyeball?
 
My eyes couldnt take this.
 
wow those are some great photos! the only eye-removal surgery i've observed was with a horse and they inserted a "fake eye" ball underneath the lid and sutured it shut to make it look "more appealing." (he was a dressage show horse) i have my first feline wet lab next week and i'm a bit nervous. last time i dealt with cats in a clinical situation was during "feral spay sunday" where i had to deal with feral cats. needless to say i'm a little terrified of cats in the hospital setting. any suggestions?
 
Bella is feeling quite frisky now (one week post-surgery) and chasing my other cat thru the house; she's feeling no ill-effects other than not wanting to visit Dr. C and her crew...The fact that she was probably experencing migrane-like pain made her surgery a no-brainer for me...
(Bella's pet, T. Vackar)
 
So glad to hear that Bella is doing fine now. Please keep us updated on her progress.

~5-Cat Style

PS. She looked super cool in the pirate's get-up!
 
We have a cat which our daughter found as a kitten.
Both eyes had been destroyed prior to her finding it.
We never had them closed up, though we may now. It is about four years old, the sockets have mostly filled win with a pink flesh of some sort. Recently there's a bad odor from the eye sockets, and more goop/puss than usual. Sigh. Off to the vet's again..
 
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