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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Sudden blindness in dogs from retinal or nerve disease compared

By Montgomery, Keith W et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2008·Angell Animal Medical Center WNE, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Acute blindness in dogs: sudden acquired retinal degeneration syndrome versus neurological disease (140 cases, 2000-2006).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 140 dogs suddenly lost their vision, and veterinarians found that many had a condition called sudden acquired retinal degeneration syndrome (SARDS), while others had neurological disease (ND). Most dogs diagnosed with SARDS were mixed breeds, but Miniature Schnauzers and Dachshunds were also affected. Symptoms like increased thirst and urination were more common in dogs with SARDS, while those with ND showed signs like swelling in the optic nerve and uneven vision. The study suggests that an eye test called an electroretinogram (ERG) is important to determine the cause of sudden vision loss in dogs.

People also search for: dog sudden blindness causes · Miniature Schnauzer vision loss · Dachshund eye problems · treatment for dog vision loss · dog neurological disease symptoms

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate dogs with amaurosis and compare signalment, history, ophthalmic examination and neurologic abnormalities between dogs diagnosed with sudden acquired retinal degeneration syndrome (SARDS) versus neurological disease (ND). Animals Studied-140 dogs with acute vision loss and ocular abnormalities insufficient to account for visual deficits. An electroretinogram (ERG) was performed on each dog. PROCEDURES: Medical records were reviewed and information was collected for all dogs meeting the inclusion criteria. Dogs diagnosed with SARDS were compared to those with ND based on signalment, duration of clinical signs, past medical problems, clinicopathologic findings, and ophthalmic and physical examination abnormalities. RESULTS: 120 dogs were diagnosed with SARDS and 20 dogs with ND based on ERG results. Mixed-breed dogs were most commonly diagnosed with SARDS as well as ND. Pure breed dogs frequently diagnosed with SARDS included the Miniature Schnauzer and Dachshund. Dogs with SARDS did not differ significantly from those with ND based on age or sex distribution. Cushing's-like symptoms were reported more frequently in SARDS dogs as well as conjunctival hyperemia and retinal vascular attenuation. Papilledema and asymmetric visual deficits were observed more frequently in dogs with ND. Dogs with ND were no more likely than SARDS dogs to have additional neurological deficits. CONCLUSIONS: Appreciable overlap of clinical signs exists between dogs with SARDS and dogs with ND resulting in acute vision loss. As a significant portion of dogs (14%) in the present study were diagnosed with ND, an ERG to rule out ND is indicated in dogs with amaurosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19046291/