Jump to content

Dogs Pupils Not Contracting


spyda62
 Share

Recommended Posts

I have just got home from the vet with my nearly 9 year old Shar-pei x dog Tank.

She has what I thought were cataracts on her eyes.

When my vet had a look, she said that her pupils were not contracting at all and that she could see right to the back of her eyes. She has ruled out PRA, cataracts, and diabetes, she has taken blood tests that we will have the results for middayish tomorrow. She said that she has never seen anything like this before and wondered if it was neurological? Maybe brain lesions?

Tank is not showing any symptoms of not being able to see. Her health is good although she has dropped a bit of weight lately. (approx 1 kilo in about 2 weeks).

I was pretty shocked (and upset) at what she was saying, as I really thought it was going to be something relatively simple and didn't ask anywhere near as many questions as I should have :(

Has anyone else experienced this in their dogs or heard of anything like this before?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am sorry Tank is unwell. I've no experience re the eyes but 1kg weight loss in a week can be quite a significant weight drop depending on the size of the dog. I hope the blood work comes back unremarkable and Tank recovers quickly. Has your vet considered Glaucoma?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The first sign that anything was wrong was when he disappeared one day on a walk (an off leash park in Sydney), he'd been right behind me with the other dogs and then suddenly he was gone. This was a walk we'd taken many times and this particular dog was a Fox Terrier, super smart. I called him many times - no response so started walking back towards my car (a long way) and met people on the way who said he'd passed them like he was running in a panic and wouldn't stop for them. I eventually found him standing near my car. I'd had him for over 2 years and this was a strange thing for him to do. He was a very active, out there character, obsessed with balls.

Over the next 2-3 months other things happened gradually, all out of character/normal behaviour, including:

biting me unprovoked on 3 occasions

sitting very quietly for long periods, appearing depressed - he was always on the move normally

falling when jumping between the two sofas and other times (he was super agile normally)

lost interest in his ball

becoming aggressive on occasions with one of my other dogs who'd been his best friend

urinary incontinence

I took him to 3 different vets with the symptoms and they all said brain tumour, one of his eyes didn't look right but my vet said the only way to truly diagnose was an MRI at great expense and you couldn't operate because he wouldn't be the same dog, even if it was possible.

When the urinary incontinence started about 2 weeks before I let him go, he didn't even know it was pouring out of him, he appeared unaware. We had good days and bad days at that time but the last straw was him going for my face suddenly, he just missed my eye. I loved him dearly and he was only about 7-8 years of age. He'd had a terrible life before I got him and that made it all the harder to accept.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have also seen it in a dog where the muscles in the eye have atrophied due to old age and just couldn't do their job quite right. The dog was given a clean bill of health and told to continue on his way.

It was diagnosed by a specialist.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tanks vision appears to be okay. She is not stumbling into anything. Last night she walked up and down the steps fine in the dark. I put a few obstacles out in the yard and she moved around them no worries.

She has got some cloudiness in her eyes which is why I thought she may have cataracts.

Kirty no...her blood pressure was not checked. I will get it done...thanks for the suggestion.

All her blood tests came back as normal yesterday. She is booked to go the the eye specialist on Wednesday (earliest app I could get).

Dogmad...So sorry for your loss. Thankfully Tank is not showing any of those symptons at all.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...