Quantifying refractive error in companion dogs with and without nuclear sclerosis: 229 eyes from 118 dogs

Author:

Francis Jenelle M.1,Mowat Freya M.23ORCID,Ludwig Allison3,Hicks Jacqueline M.45,Pumphrey Stephanie A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Sciences Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University North Grafton Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Surgical Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison Wisconsin USA

3. Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, School of Medicine and Public Health University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison Wisconsin USA

4. Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health Boston University Boston Massachusetts USA

5. Dr. Francis's current address is Animal Eye Clinic Matthews North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo evaluate the relationship between nuclear sclerosis (NS) and refractive error in companion dogs.Animals studiedOne hundred and eighteen companion dogs.ProceduresDogs were examined and found to be free of significant ocular abnormalities aside from NS. NS was graded from 0 (absent) to 3 (severe) using a scale developed by the investigators. Manual refraction was performed. The effect of NS grade on refractive error was measured using a linear mixed effects analysis adjusted for age. The proportion of eyes with >1.5 D myopia in each NS grade was evaluated using a chi‐square test. Visual impairment score (VIS) was obtained for a subset of dogs and compared against age, refractive error, and NS grade.ResultsAge was strongly correlated with NS grade (p < .0001). Age‐adjusted analysis of NS grade relative to refraction showed a mild but not statistically significant increase in myopia with increasing NS grade, with eyes with grade 3 NS averaging 0.58–0.88 D greater myopia than eyes without NS. However, the myopia of >1.5 D was documented in 4/58 (6.9%) eyes with grade 0 NS, 12/91 (13.2%) eyes with grade 1 NS, 13/57 (22.8%) eyes with grade 2 NS, and 7/23 (30.4%) eyes with grade 3 NS. Risk of myopia >1.5 D was significantly associated with increasing NS grade (p = .02). VIS was associated weakly with refractive error, moderately with age, and significantly with NS grade.ConclusionsNS is associated with visual deficits in some dogs but is only weakly associated with myopia. More work is needed to characterize vision in aging dogs.

Funder

Companion Animal Health Fund

Morris Animal Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Veterinary

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