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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Early signs of cone-rod eye disease in Standard Wire-haired Dachshunds

By Ropstad, Ernst O et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2007·Department of Companion Animal Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical findings in early onset cone-rod dystrophy in the Standard Wire-haired Dachshund.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of Standard Wire-haired Dachshund puppies, aged 5 to 10 weeks, showed signs of cone-rod dystrophy, a genetic eye condition that can lead to vision loss. The most noticeable symptom was pin-point sized pupils when examined with light. Some puppies began showing more severe retinal changes as early as 10 months, while others didn't show signs until they were 3 years old. The best way to diagnose this condition was through a specialized eye test called electroretinography (ERG), which showed significant issues with the dogs' cone responses. Unfortunately, this condition can lead to progressive vision loss over time.

People also search for: Dachshund eye problems · puppy pin-point pupils · cone-rod dystrophy in dogs · dog vision loss symptoms · early onset retinal disease in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical findings and the age of onset of cone-rod dystrophy (crd) in the Standard Wire-haired Dachshund (SWHD) and to evaluate which clinical tests could be used to obtain a reliable diagnosis. ANIMALS: Sixty-eight SWHD and SWHD-derived dogs were used, including 23 affected with crd and 45 controls, respectively. PROCEDURES: The dogs were subjected to behavioral testing, examination of pupillary light reflexes (PLRs), indirect ophthalmoscopy and bilateral full field electroretinography (ERG). RESULTS: The majority of affected puppies (5-10 weeks) displayed pin-point sized pupils upon examination with focal light. All dogs in the control group, except one, displayed normal PLRs upon examination. In all crd-affected dogs there was a great variation both in age of onset and in clinical appearance of retinal changes upon fundoscopy. Two siblings displayed panretinal degeneration at the age of 10 months while other affected dogs showed early changes at the age of 3 years. Generalized bilateral retinal atrophy was the end stage of the disease. The maze test revealed no obvious differences among affected and unaffected groups. ERG recordings showed only slightly reduced rod, and mixed rod-cone responses, but severely reduced cone single flash a- and b-wave amplitudes, and cone flicker amplitudes were observed in all affected dogs. CONCLUSION: Presence of pin-point sized pupils in young SWHDs was found to be an important indicator of early onset crd. Fundoscopic changes and progression of disease at later stages resembled those previously described in the majority of progressive retinal atrophies in dog. ERG was found to be the most reliable diagnostic procedure to clinically diagnose crd in the SWHD.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17324160/