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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Scaling skin disease in Golden Retrievers under 1 year old explained

By Mauldin, E A et al.Ā·Published in Veterinary pathologyĀ·2008Ā·School of Veterinary Medicine, United StatesĀ·View original on PubMed →

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Original publication title: The clinical and morphologic features of nonepidermolytic ichthyosis in the golden retriever.

Species:
dog
Skin & coatDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of Golden Retrievers was diagnosed with a skin condition called ichthyosis, which causes scaling and dryness. Many of the affected dogs showed symptoms before they turned one year old, while others developed issues later in life. The condition was linked to genetic factors, and all dogs had similar skin changes when examined under a microscope. This unique disorder is characterized by thickened skin layers without inflammation. While there is no specific treatment mentioned, understanding the condition can help owners manage their dog's skin health better.

People also search for: Golden Retriever skin problems Ā· ichthyosis in dogs Ā· dog scaling skin treatment

Abstract

A scaling disorder specific to Golden Retriever dogs has been recognized by both dermatologists and pathologists, but to date has not been well characterized. At the University of Pennsylvania's Laboratory of Toxicology and Pathology, 46 cases of ichthyosis were diagnosed histologically in Golden Retriever dogs from January 2004 to January 2007. A total of 22 dogs had skin lesions documented at younger than 1 year of age; 3 dogs between 1 and 2 years of age; 13 dogs developed lesions at older than 2 years; and the time of onset was unknown for 8 dogs. A total of 25 dogs were female, and 21 were male. All dogs had strikingly similar histopathologic changes that consisted of mild to moderate laminar orthokeratotic hyperkeratosis with an absence of epidermal hyperplasia and dermal inflammation. Ultrastructural analysis using a ruthenium tetroxide fixation method was performed on punch biopsy samples from 5 dogs and compared with 2 control dogs (1 clinically and histologically normal sibling of an affected dog and 1 Cairn Terrier). All affected dogs had retained and convoluted membranes with crystalline structures in the stratum corneum. Scattered keratinocytes in the granular cell layer had prominent, clear, membrane-bound, cytoplasmic vacuoles. Pedigree analysis of 14 dogs was compatible with autosomal recessive inheritance, but incomplete dominance could not be ruled out. This unique hyperkeratotic/scaling disorder in Golden Retrievers has distinctive clinical, histologic, and ultrastructural features, which are consistent with a primary cornification defect.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18424829/