Please send me updates by newsletter.

QuikVue Vet Case Study—Cataract

02/06/25

We are glad to share a vet case study captured by QuikVue eye imaging adaptor from Dr.Allison Fuchs.

 

This middle aged terrier mix presented to us for cataracts and blindness last week. The owner has noted cloudiness and slowly decreasing vision over the last 6 months with worse vision in dim light noted first. This patient has NOT had any dilation. What do you see and what are your concerns? If your alarm bells all went off, good! This dog does have cataracts, but they are at an immature stage and you can still clearly see a tapetal reflection. Fundic exam was easily performed, which means if everything is working properly the dog should be able to see out. The history, absent PLRs, and progressive cortical cataracts should be a red flag for retinal degeneration. On fundic exam, this dog’s retinas were at an advanced stage of atrophy. All is consistent with progressive rod-cone degeneration, aka PRCD or PRA. This is a group of inherited retinal degenerations that can affect just about any breed of dog, and rarely cats. Cataract development is common due to release of toxic factors from the retina. While cataract surgery can be helpful in some cases, it is usually a short term fix as the retinal degeneration is not treatable.





We are glad to share a vet case study captured by QuikVue eye imaging adaptor from Dr.Allison Fuchs.

 

This middle aged terrier mix presented to us for cataracts and blindness last week. The owner has noted cloudiness and slowly decreasing vision over the last 6 months with worse vision in dim light noted first. This patient has NOT had any dilation. What do you see and what are your concerns? If your alarm bells all went off, good! This dog does have cataracts, but they are at an immature stage and you can still clearly see a tapetal reflection. Fundic exam was easily performed, which means if everything is working properly the dog should be able to see out. The history, absent PLRs, and progressive cortical cataracts should be a red flag for retinal degeneration. On fundic exam, this dog’s retinas were at an advanced stage of atrophy. All is consistent with progressive rod-cone degeneration, aka PRCD or PRA. This is a group of inherited retinal degenerations that can affect just about any breed of dog, and rarely cats. Cataract development is common due to release of toxic factors from the retina. While cataract surgery can be helpful in some cases, it is usually a short term fix as the retinal degeneration is not treatable.





Recent Blogs

Try Digital Slit-Lamp Imaging Before You Buy: EyeStream 7-Day U.S. Trial

Try Digital Slit-Lamp Imaging Before You Buy: EyeStream 7-Day U.S. Trial

EyeStream helps clinics add digital photo, video, meibography, fluorescein-supported imaging, and VisuDoc documentation to compatible slit lamps. With the 7-day U.S. trial, clinicians can evaluate the workflow in their own exam room before making a purchase decision.

07-01,2026
MeiboVue in Sjögren's Dry Eye: Tracking Severe Gland Dropout When Symptoms Improve

MeiboVue in Sjögren's Dry Eye: Tracking Severe Gland Dropout When Symptoms Improve

After multimodal dry-eye care, symptoms may improve — but clinicians still need to know whether severe meibomian gland dropout is stable or progressing. MeiboVue supports portable baseline and follow-up meibography in pre-test or chairside flow. One de-identified case shows before/after comparison alongside qualified clinical findings.

06-23,2026
Four Cases: What AnterVue Imaging Can Help You Show

Four Cases: What AnterVue Imaging Can Help You Show

The following de-identified captures illustrate four common scleral lens scenarios. Images show visible findings for discussion—not standalone proof of fit quality or required lens changes.

06-16,2026