OP- sorry to hear about Ted’s woes, and that the meds etc haven’t worked. Our pug had a corneal ulcer, from insufficient teardrop production; she then ran into a protruding door hinge and ruptured the eyeball(!!). In hindsight it was all fairly horrendous, but at the time we just kinda pulled through; she refused to open her eyelid in the immediate aftermath, so at least some eyeball integrity was retained. And we’re bloody-minded enough that we refused to allow the vet to remove her eye though, and kept at 3 times a day with plasma and 2-3 types of meds, and now her eyeball’s in pretty good shape.
Appreciating that cats are different (more difficult to administer meds to, for starters):
– I’d talk to the vet more. Why does the eye “need” to be removed? What would be needed in order to keep it? Corneal ulcers do heal with suitable medication, patience etc – how practical is that in this case?
– if the eye has to be removed, Ted will in the long-term adjust and be OK. His distance perception may be reduced, but they’re amazingly versatile and adaptable animals. I’d be more concerned about the short term, like the immediate 1-3 months after surgery. He’ll need a lot of care, which may be difficult with him being an outdoor cat.