PRA

 

 

 

SHARE OUR SITE  AND INFORMATION WITH ALL YOUR FRIENDS !!

 

 

 

 

 

   
Progressive Retinal Atrophy (PRA)
in Dogs

 

This is a genetic, inherited disease of the retina (the "film" in the camera), which occurs in both eyes simultaneously. The disease is non-painful, and there is no cure for it. The eyes are genetically programmed to go blind. PRA occurs in most breeds of dogs and can occur in mixed breeds also. It is recessively inherited in all breeds studied, with the following exceptions: PRA is dominantly inherited in Shih Tzu Yorkie Terrier, Old English Mastiffs and Bullmastiffs, Akita, Australian cattle dog, Australian shepherd, American and English cocker spaniel, Basenji, beagle, Belgian sheepdog, Briard, Brittany spaniel, Chesapeake Bay retriever, collie (rough and smooth), dachshund, English springer spaniel, German shepherd, German short-haired pointer, golden retriever, greyhound (without typical initial night blindness), Irish setter, Labrador retriever, mastiff, Nova Scotia duck tolling retriever, old English sheepdog, papillon, pekingese, poodle (miniature and toy), Portuguese water dog, Rottweiler, samoyed, Shetland sheepdog, Siberian husky, Tibetan spaniel, Tibetan terrier, Welsh springer spaniel,

Clinical signs vary from the dog first becoming night blind in the early stage of PRA (not able to see in low light surroundings) to the entire visual field in all light levels becoming affected, which is advanced PRA. The pupils are usually dilated, and owners often notice a "glow" and increased "eye shine" from the eyes. All dogs with PRA will eventually develop blindness from advanced PRA, and this time frame until the dog is blind varies considerably from dog to dog, but usually takes at least 6 months from the time of diagnosis, and

 can rarely take years until the dog is completely blind. Although no treatment for PRA is possible to stop the disease, nutritional antioxidant supplementation for retinal health may help slow the deterioration of the retina to "buy some time" before the blindness inevitably happens. Animal Eye Care believes that in many of these PRA patients, specific oral antioxidant nutritional therapy can delay the progression of blindness. Blindness is not avoided, however, in any PRA patients. If oral antioxidants were used, they would be continued until complete vision loss occurred.

What to do if you suspect PRA:

Have your dog examined by a board certified veterinary ophthalmologist to determine if this disease is indeed present. If you are located in the Pacific Northwest or in British Colombia, you may contact our office to schedule a comprehensive ophthalmic examination. Dogs with PRA should not be bred, and the breeder that you received your dog from should be notified that the dog is affected, so the breeder can alter their breeding program in future. It is important to understand that dogs with PRA are happy dogs. Their eyes don't hurt, and they adjust very well to their slow loss of vision. In fact, if a dog were destined to become blind and Dr. McCalla could pick the disease, it would be PRA, as the vision loss is slow and non-painful, and the dog is given much time to adjust to its vision loss.

It is important to realize that it is OK to grieve about your pet's vision loss, but you must not put your sad feelings in your dog's head--they aren't really there! Your dog is not suffering. They adjust well to their vision loss, and it is by far hardest to deal with on the owner's side. Your dog's job description has not changed. Your blind dog is happy as long as its routine is stable. From your dog's point of view, life continues to be great-- you are there as always, and they just need to use their other keen senses a bit more to get the same information they used to view. Keep household furniture in its place, and consider purchasing the book "Living With Blind Dogs" by Caroline Levin. Animal Eye Care also sells this book. It is the only book of this subject matter, and is beneficial in helping owners and their affected pets adjust to the vision loss. Animal Eye Care also sells pet medical alert tags. One tag reads "I Have Poor Vision" while the other reads "I Am Blind". Please contact our office if you want to purchase a tag for your pet.

Dogs with PRA can develop cataracts late in the disease process. Cataract surgery would never be done, as it would not help the dog to see. However, cataracts can cause pain and damage to the eye, and if the eyes look very cloudy to you, please call Animal Eye Care for a reexamination as soon as possible.

 

OUR BABIES MEAN THE WORLD TO US.. I AM A BREEDER THAT TAKES PRIDE IN MY FUR BABIES. I AM HERE FOR MY PUPPY PARENTS FOR ALL THE YEARS OF THEIR BABY'S LIFE. I LOVE TO GET UPDATES ON EACH AND EVERY BABY WE PLACE.

 

 

 

Our # 1-888-9 Shorkie

Our Shorkies Come With

Our 5yr Health Warrantee

Our Vet Health Exam

About Our Puppies
Our Shorkies Info.
Our Adults

F1 Or F2 the Difference

1st generation 2nd generation

 

Our Letter To You

Breeder Schooling & Training?

Picking A Breeder

Breeding Responsibility

 OFFICIAL SHORKIE?

Professional Breeder

Buying Locally

What Is A Breeder?

 

 

WHY DO GENTIC TESING?

CoCo's Story Must READ!!

Maddie's Story Must READ!!

Why Spay/Neuter

Tea Cup size-Weights

Early Neuter

Bile Acid Testing

Why it's important

Hypoallergenic?

Parvo
Patellar luxation

Puppy Stress

 

Adopted/Past Shorkies