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Most cases of retinal dysplasia in dogs are hereditary.
Cataracts or glaucoma can also occur secondary to retinal dysplasia.
At some locations, however, there was retinal dysplasia or disorganization of photoreceptor position.
Retinal dysplasia is an eye disease affecting the retina of animals and, less commonly, humans.
Sheep - Retinal dysplasia occurs by in utero infection with bluetongue disease.
Horses - Retinal dysplasia is bilateral, not inherited, and appears as multifocal or geographic disease.
Labrador Retriever - focal, multifocal, geographic, or complete retinal dysplasia.
There is another retinal disease in Briards known as hereditary retinal dysplasia.
However, there were foci of retinal dysplasia, characterized by rosette formation (Figure 4M).
Retinal detachment occurs with complete retinal dysplasia, and is accompanied by blindness in that eye.
Bedlington Terrier - complete retinal dysplasia.
Cattle - Retinal dysplasia occurs in utero through infection with bovine viral diarrhea.
Retinal dysplasia can be focal, multifocal, geographic, or accompanied by retinal detachment.
Focal and multifocal retinal dysplasia appears as streaks and dots in the central retina.
These include cataracts, retinal atrophy and retinal dysplasia.
Retinal dysplasia is characterized by folds or rosettes (round clumps) of the retinal tissue.
Eye lesions include keratitis, uveitis, optic neuritis, retinitis, and retinal dysplasia.
Havanese suffer primarily from luxating patella, liver disease, heart disease, cataracts and retinal dysplasia.
Eye problems are also possible in some Labradors, particularly progressive retinal atrophy, cataracts, corneal dystrophy and retinal dysplasia.
Geographic retinal dysplasia appears as an irregular or horseshoe-shaped area of mixed hyper or hyporeflectivity in the central retina.
The health problems shared with this breed include mitral valve disease, luxating patella, and hereditary eye issues such as cataracts and retinal dysplasia.
Retinal dysplasia is characterized by palisading outer retinal cells that surround a central lumen [ 57 ] .
Australian Shepherd - retinal dysplasia occurs with other eye disorders, such as an oval pupil, microcornea (small cornea), cataracts, and retinal detachment.
They include hereditary cataracts, corneal dystrophy, distichiasis, entropion, microphthalmia, progressive retinal atrophy, and retinal dysplasia.
Minor health concerns for the breed include seizures and allergies; very rarely, one will see axonal dystrophy, cataract, retinal dysplasia and deafness in the breed.