Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Iris blood vessel problems in dogs with diabetes compared to healthy
By Pirie, Christopher G et al.Ā·Published in American journal of veterinary researchĀ·2021Ā·View original on PubMed ā
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Original publication title: Assessment of iris vasculature abnormalities in dogs with diabetes mellitus.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 10 dogs with diabetes was examined for eye problems, specifically looking at the blood vessels in their irises. The tests showed that these diabetic dogs had significant abnormalities in their iris blood vessels compared to healthy dogs. The diabetic dogs had more severe leakage of dye into their irises, which indicates vascular issues. The severity of these changes was linked to how long the dogs had diabetes and how well their blood sugar was controlled. This information can help veterinarians monitor and manage eye health in diabetic dogs.
People also search for: dog diabetes eye problems Ā· diabetic dog iris issues Ā· blood sugar control in dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To identify and characterize abnormalities of iris vasculature in dogs with diabetes mellitus, compared to clinically normal, age-matched control dogs, by means of anterior segment angiography. ANIMALS: 10 dogs with naturally occurring diabetes mellitus and 10 age-matched control dogs with no ocular or systemic disease. PROCEDURES: The day before iris vasculature abnormality (IVA) assessment, all dogs underwent complete physical and ophthalmic examinations and baseline clinicopathologic analyses. For diabetic dogs, serum fructosamine concentration and a 12-hour blood glucose concentration curve were generated. The next day, all dogs were sedated and anterior segment angiography (following IV injection of indocyanine green [1 mg/kg] and subsequently sodium fluorescein [20 mg/kg]) was performed with a full-spectrum camera and camera adapter system. Group findings were compared, and multiple linear regression analysis was performed to identify potential factor associations with IVAs. RESULTS: During anterior segment angiography, the arterial, capillary, and venous phases were identified in all dogs. Times to onset of all phases in diabetic dogs were significantly less than those in control dogs. Vascular disruptions within the peripupillary region (evident following sodium fluorescein administration) were common in diabetic dogs. Severity of dye leakage into the iris stroma and aqueous humor was significantly greater in diabetic dogs than in control dogs. Duration of disease, mean blood glucose concentration, and serum fructosamine concentration were significantly associated with IVAs. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: In diabetic dogs, anterior segment angiography revealed IVAs that were not evident in control dogs. The severity of those changes appeared to be associated with disease duration and blood glucose regulation.
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Search related cases āOriginal publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34554872/