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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Slowly worsening eye disease in Shetland Sheepdogs

By Karlstam, Lena et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2011·msholm Referral Hospital Str&#xf6·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A slowly progressive retinopathy in the Shetland Sheepdog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of adult Shetland Sheepdogs was found to have a slowly progressive eye condition called retinopathy, which affects their vision over time. The dogs showed greyish discoloration in their eyes, but they did not appear to be seriously visually impaired. Tests revealed that while some dogs had normal responses in their eyes, others showed reduced function, indicating some level of degeneration. Despite the changes, the dogs maintained a reasonable quality of vision, and the exact cause of this condition is still unknown.

People also search for: Shetland Sheepdog eye problems · dog retinopathy symptoms · slowly progressive retinopathy treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe a slowly progressive retinopathy (SPR) in Shetland Sheepdogs. Animals  Forty adult Shetlands Sheepdogs with ophthalmoscopic signs of SPR and six normal Shetland Sheepdogs were included in the study. PROCEDURE: Ophthalmic examination including slit-lamp biomicroscopy and ophthalmoscopy was performed in all dogs. Electroretinograms and obstacle course-test were performed in 13 affected and 6 normal dogs. The SPR dogs were subdivided into two groups according to their dark-adapted b-wave amplitudes. SPR1-dogs had ophthalmoscopic signs of SPR, but normal dark-adapted b-wave amplitudes. Dogs with both ophthalmoscopic signs and subnormal, dark-adapted b-wave amplitudes were assigned to group SPR2. Eyes from two SPR2 dogs were obtained for microscopic examination. RESULTS: The ophthalmoscopic changes included bilateral, symmetrical, greyish discoloration in the peripheral tapetal fundus with normal or marginally attenuated vessels. Repeated examination showed that the ophthalmoscopic changes slowly spread across the central parts of the tapetal fundus, but did not progress to obvious neuroretinal thinning presenting as tapetal hyper-reflectivity. The dogs did not appear seriously visually impaired. SPR2 showed significantly reduced b-wave amplitudes throughout dark-adaptation. Microscopy showed thinning of the outer nuclear layer and abnormal appearance of rod and cone outer segments. Testing for the progressive rod-cone degeneration ( prcd )-mutation in three dogs with SPR was negative. CONCLUSION: Slowly progressive retinopathy is a generalized rod-cone degeneration that on ophthalmoscopy looks similar to early stages of progressive retinal atrophy. The ophthalmoscopic findings are slowly progressive without tapetal hyper-reflectivity. Visual impairment is not obvious and the electroretinogram is more subtly altered than in progressive retinal atrophy. The etiology remains unclear. SPR is not caused by the prcd-mutation.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21733063/