# Feline Conjunctival Sequestra—A Case Series

**Authors:** Carolina Cauduro da Rosa, Brett D. Story, Sangwan Park, Gillian C. Shaw, Leandro B. C. Teixeira, Jacob Morris, Bret A. Moore, Fabiano Montiani‐Ferreira

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/vop.70056 · 2025-07-27

## TL;DR

This paper reports the first case series of conjunctival sequestra in cats, describing their clinical and histopathological features.

## Contribution

The first documented case series of feline conjunctival sequestrum, including clinical and histopathological findings.

## Key findings

- Five cases of feline conjunctival sequestra were identified with amorphous black plaques in conjunctival tissue.
- Histopathology showed collagen compaction and absence of fibroblasts, similar to corneal sequestra.
- Three cases had conjunctival ulceration and possible chronic irritation or FHV-1 involvement.

## Abstract

Corneal sequestrum is a condition commonly observed in cats, though the pathogenesis is not fully understood. The occurrence of conjunctival sequestrum has not previously been documented. This report aims to describe a series of cases of conjunctival sequestra in cats.

A 3‐year‐old male Persian cat presented after 2 months of blepharospasm and epiphora in the right eye, accompanied by mild conjunctival hyperemia. Histopathologic findings from four other cases are also included.

After presentation of Patient 1, the database (from 2007 to 2025) of the Comparative Ocular Pathology Laboratory of Wisconsin (COPLOW) was searched for other cases of feline conjunctival sequestrum, four of which were identified. In all cases, an amorphous black plaque was observed in the conjunctival tissue during the ophthalmological examination. Three of the four cases also had corneal sequestra ipsilaterally. Histopathology of the corneal sequestra was available in two of the cases.

Histopathology of all five conjunctival lesions revealed focally extensive compaction and brunescence of proprial collagen and absence of fibroblasts. Three of the cases had conjunctival ulceration overlying the sequestrum. The surrounding substantia propria was variably infiltrated by inflammatory cells and microorganisms. The appearance of conjunctival sequestra was remarkably similar to that of corneal sequestra.

This is the first reported case‐series of feline conjunctival sequestrum. Variable presentation of concurrent ocular abnormalities and history led to no definitive conclusion to a common cause. Similar to corneal sequestra, chronic irritation and a possible contribution from FHV‐1 infection are suspected.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** blepharospasm (MESH:D001764), ocular abnormalities (MESH:D005124), Conjunctival Sequestra (MESH:D003229), inflammatory (MESH:D007249), Corneal sequestrum (MESH:D003316), epiphora (MESH:D007766), hyperemia (MESH:D006940)
- **Species:** Felis catus (cat, species) [taxon 9685], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12765223/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12765223