Rhegmatogenous retinal detachment in Labrador retrievers. I. Development of retinal tears and detachment
N. P. Blair, J. T. Dodge and G. M. Schmidt
We used clinical and pathologic methods to examine ten Labrador retrievers
with ocular and skeletal abnormalities. The major ocular findings were
axial myopia; cataract; vitreous abnormalities, including liquefaction,
detachment, and vitreoretinal traction; retinal tears; rhegmatogenous
retinal detachment; and proliferative vitreoretinopathy. The appendicular
skeleton showed retarded bone growth, bone dysplasia, and degenerative
arthropathy. Vitreoretinal traction appeared to be the cause of the retinal
tears because (1) formed vitreous was always attached near the anterior
edge of the tear, and (2) vitreous traction caused a retinal ridge adjacent
to a retinal tear in a dog that had not yet developed retinal detachment.
The pathogenetic sequence of spontaneous vitreous abnormalities, retinal
tears, and retinal detachment observed in these dogs has not previously
been described in animals, to the best of our knowledge, and mimicked human
rhegmatogenous retinal detachment, particularly those associated with giant
retinal tears.