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Lacrimal cysts (dacryops), which involve lacrimal tissue, are uncommon in dogs with an obscure/unclear pathogenesis. Compared to the current available literature, this report describes the clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical features of two cases of unusual dacryops in brachycephalic dogs. A three-year-old male Cane Corso was referred with a 1-month history of swelling ventromedial to the left eye associated with blepharospasm and epiphora. Furthermore, a severe lower and upper eyelid entropion and a deep corneal ulcer were present. B-mode ultrasonography and a CT scan revealed a subcutaneous cyst, closely adherent to the maxillary bone. Surgical removal and the correction of entropion were performed. No recurrence and/or complication was detected by seven-year follow-up. Histopathology revealed a cystic structure with single- to double-cell-layered, nonciliated, cuboidal epithelia. Alcian blue stain revealed rare, disseminated goblet cells admixed with epithelial cells. The epithelium was strongly Cytokeratin-positive by immunohistochemistry and appeared lined by several layers of smooth muscle actin (SMA)-positive myoepithelial cells. A 1-year-old male French Bulldog with a 3-month lesion of the third eyelid of the right eye. The lesion (15 mm × 7 mm) beneath the conjunctiva appeared pale-pink, smooth, and multilobulated. Excision was performed by blunt dissection through the conjunctiva on the palpebral surface of the third eyelid. Recovery was uncomplicated, and no recurrence has been noted at three-year follow-up. Cytology of the cystic fluid and histopathology and immunohistochemistry of the cyst wall revealed findings for case 1. To further characterize the SMA-positive spindle cells located directly beneath the cyst-lining epithelium, double-color immunofluorescence for SMA and p63 (a myoepithelial cell marker) was performed on the sample from case 2. The analysis revealed that the SMA-positive cells lacked p63 expression, indicating a non-myoepithelial phenotype. The histological findings in our cases are consistent with previous reports of canine dacryops. The positivity of immunohistochemical staining for SMA in cells directly beneath the epithelium of dacryops in the cases here described in two brachycephalic dogs is consistent with previous reports in dogs and horses but in contrast with a retrospective study about a human dacryops. These results support the conclusion that the pathogenesis of dacryops in dogs should exclude failure of ductular "neuromuscular" contractility.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci12080705 | DOI Listing |
Vet Sci
July 2025
Unit of Surgery, Department of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Productions, University of Naples "Federico II", 80137 Naples, Italy.
Lacrimal cysts (dacryops), which involve lacrimal tissue, are uncommon in dogs with an obscure/unclear pathogenesis. Compared to the current available literature, this report describes the clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical features of two cases of unusual dacryops in brachycephalic dogs. A three-year-old male Cane Corso was referred with a 1-month history of swelling ventromedial to the left eye associated with blepharospasm and epiphora.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVet Ophthalmol
January 2025
Veterinary Specialist Services, Jindalee, Queensland, Australia.
Objective: To describe the use of an endoscope to assist in performing minimally invasive dacryocystorhinostomy in a dog to successfully manage a nasolacrimal duct cyst (dacryocyst).
Animal Studied: A 4-year-old female spayed American Staffordshire Terrier with chronic epiphora and swelling ventromedial to the nasal canthus of the right eye and reverse sneezing.
Procedures: Computed tomography revealed a fluid-filled cystic lesion of the right nasolacrimal duct with extensive nasal extension and secondary obstructive frontal sinusitis.
Vet Med Sci
September 2022
Department of Veterinary Clinical Science, College of Veterinary Medicine and Research Institute for Veterinary Science, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea.
Background: A 10-year-old castrated male Maltese dog was presented with chronic swelling that had been present for at least 5 years in the medial canthus of the right eye (OD).
Objectives: To describe the treatment outcome of dacryops with dacryolithiasis.
Methods: Bilateral patency of the nasolacrimal system was confirmed by flushing of both upper and lower puncta.
Vet Ophthalmol
March 2021
Institute of Veterinary Anatomy, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany.
Objective: To describe and discuss ventromedial orbital lacrimal gland or duct cysts (dacryops) in dogs with extensive bone defects based on their symptoms, results of diagnostic imaging and histopathological examination, and therapy and discuss their potential origin based on the morphology.
Animals Studied: Four dogs of different breeds, age, and sex were presented with a unilateral round, slow growing, indolent, and non-tender process ventromedial to the nasal canthus of the eye.
Procedures: Transverse computed tomography showed a low-density, non-contrast-enhancing cystic process ventromedial to the globe with extensive defects in the lacrimal and maxillary bones in all cases.
Vet Ophthalmol
May 2019
Newtown Veterinary Specialists, Newtown, Connecticut.
Objective: To describe the efficacy of the sclerosing agent 1% polidocanol in the treatment of a suspected nasolacrimal duct cyst in a dog.
Animal Studied: A 5-year-old castrated male Golden Retriever with chronic epiphora of the right eye.
Procedures: Ocular examination revealed epiphora and a negative Jones test of the right eye and was otherwise normal.