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Informationen zum Autor The Authors Kerry L. Ketring, DVM, DACVO, a veterinary ophthalmologist, was in private practice in Ohio and Kentucky for 32 years; he retired to Michigan, where he continues to see clients. He also lectures nationally and internationally. Mary Belle Glaze, DVM, MS, DACVO, is a veterinary ophthalmologist at the Gulf Coast Animal Eye Clinic, a private referral practice in Houston, Texas. Prior to that she was on staff at Louisiana State University's Veterinary Teaching Hospital for 20 years and is a past president of the American College of Veterinary Ophthalmologists. She also lectures nationally and internationally. Klappentext 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. Zusammenfassung 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. Inhaltsverzeichnis Listing of Breed Predispositions to Ocular Disease . . . page xvii I. Normal Eye A. Diagrams 1. Cross-sectional 1 2. Fundus oculus 2 B. Normal adnexa/anterior segment 1. Frontal view 3, 4 2. Lateral view a. Lens and cornea 5 b. Gross angle 6 3. Iridocorneal angle-Gonioscopic view 7 C. Normal fundus 8-17 II. Globe-Orbit Relationship A. Convergent strabismus 18 B. Enophthalmos 1. Microphthalmia 19 2. Phthisis bulbi 20 3. Horner's syndrome 21 4. Retrobulbar tumor 22 5. Pain 37, 40, 42, 76, 125, 143 C. Exophthalmos 1. Cellulitis/Retrobulbar abscess 23-25 2. Neoplasia a. Retrobulbar lymphoma 26 b. Zygomatic osteoma 27 3. Orbital pseudotumor 28, 29 D. Proptosis 30 E. Orbitalmucocele 31, 32 III. Adnexa A. Eyelid agenesis 33-36 B. Entropion 37 C. Ectropion 38 D. Distichiasis 39 E. Blepharitis 1. Herpetic 40, 54 2. Allergic blepharitis 41, 42, 51 3. Bacterial blepharitis 43 4. Meibomianitis 44 5. Demodicosis 49 6. Mycobacterial dermatitis 50 7. Food allergy 52 8. Pemphigus erythematosus 53 9. Persian idiopathic facial dermatitis 55 F. Apocrine cystadenoma 45, 46 G. Chalazion 47 H. Lipogranulomatous conjunctivitis 48 I. Granuloma/Histoplasmosis 68 J. Neoplasia 1. Cutaneous histiocytosis 56 2. Squamous cell carcinoma 57-59 3. Adenocarcinoma 60, 61 4. Mast cell tumor 62-64