08-25-2008, 01:57 PM
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#47 |
| Missing Yoshi Everyday! Donating Member
Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Wichita, KS
Posts: 15,110
| Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeri Cunningham I would go to the vet. Our Spicy got a spot at around 4 yrs old and at nine she is almost completely blind. The vet said it was progressive and couldn't be fixed.
A cloudy eye or increased opacity of the eye is associated with reduced transparency of either the cornea, the fluid media within the eye, or the lens. This change may be described as a "film" covering the eye or as an increased cloudiness within eye. Cloudiness of the eye may or may not be associated with a reduction in vision. The causes of a cloudy eye typically fall into one of the following categories:
Cloudiness of the cornea, which may occur with corneal infections, corneal scarring, infiltrative inflammatory diseases of the cornea, fatty infiltration or calcium deposition within the cornea, or corneal edema (fluid accumulation)
Cloudiness of the aqueous humor, which is the fluid that circulates within the front chamber of the eye. This may be due to the accumulation of white blood cells, protein, fatty lipids or blood. | hehe I think Jeri must have missed the update! hehe |
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