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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Chronic glaucoma in dogs linked to pectinate ligament changes seen

By Bauer, B S et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2016·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Chronic Glaucoma in Dogs: Relationships Between Histologic Lesions and the Gonioscopic Diagnosis of Pectinate Ligament Dysplasia.

Species:
dog
Canine GlaucomaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A dog with chronic glaucoma was found to have pectinate ligament dysplasia (PLD), a common cause of this eye condition. However, a study showed that the microscopic changes in the eye tissue associated with PLD were also present in dogs with secondary glaucoma, making it difficult to diagnose PLD based solely on tissue samples. This means that if your dog has glaucoma, the specific cause may not be clear just from looking at the eye tissue. It's important to rely on a thorough examination by your veterinarian, including gonioscopy, to determine the best course of treatment for your dog's eye health.

People also search for: dog glaucoma treatment · pectinate ligament dysplasia in dogs · chronic glaucoma in dogs symptoms

Abstract

Pectinate ligament dysplasia (PLD) is a common cause of canine glaucoma and the definitive clinical diagnosis is based on gonioscopy. Although the histologic lesions of PLD have been described, it has not been determined whether these changes are specific for PLD or if similar histologic changes can develop as a consequence of secondary glaucoma. The filtration angles of 61 enucleated canine globes with chronic glaucoma were evaluated with light microscopy by 3 examiners who were masked to the clinical history, signalment, and gonioscopic results. A histologic diagnosis of PLD versus non-PLD was determined by each examiner based on previously reported morphologic criteria and compared with the clinical gonioscopic diagnosis. Of the 61 enucleated glaucomatous eyes, 40 were clinically diagnosed with PLD. For all 3 examiners, a histologic diagnosis of PLD corresponded poorly with the clinical diagnosis of PLD (range of kappa score: 0.149-0.269; range of AUC: 0.592-0.621). There was no difference between examiners in their ability to correctly diagnose PLD histologically (P = .978). A fair degree of agreement was noted among examiners in obtaining their suspected histologic diagnosis of PLD (kappa score 0.256). No individual or sets of histologic ICA features were consistent with clinical PLD. The results indicate the histologic ICA changes proposed to be characteristic of PLD are also noted in canine globes affected with chronic secondary glaucoma. Therefore, using routine histologic evaluation, a histologic diagnosis of PLD is not possible in the face of chronic canine glaucoma.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27084398/