Purpose: To determine the association between age and retinal full-field electroretinographic (ERG) measures in companion (pet) dogs, an important translational model species for human neurologic aging.
Methods: Healthy adult dogs with no significant ophthalmic abnormalities were included. Unilateral full-field light- and dark-adapted electroretinography was performed using a handheld device, with mydriasis and topical anaesthesia. Partial least squares effect screening analysis was performed to determine the effect of age, sex, body weight and use of anxiolytic medication on log-transformed ERG peak times and amplitudes; age and anxiolytic usage had significant effects on multiple ERG outcomes. Mixed model analysis was performed on data from dogs not receiving anxiolytic medications.
Results: In dogs not receiving anxiolytics, median age was 118 months (interquartile range 72-140 months, n = 77, 44 purebred, 33 mixed breed dogs). Age was significantly associated with prolonged peak times of a-waves (dark-adapted 3 and 10 cds/m flash p < 0.0001) and b-waves (cone flicker p = 0.03, dark-adapted 0.01 cds/m flash p = 0.001). Age was also significantly associated with reduced amplitudes of a-waves (dark-adapted 3 cds/m flash p < 0.0001, 10 cds/m flash p = 0.005) and b-waves (light-adapted 3 cds/m flash p < 0.0001, dark-adapted 0.01 cds/m flash p = 0.0004, 3 cds/m flash p < 0.0001, 10 cds/m flash p = 0.007) and flicker (light-adapted 30 Hz 3 cds/m p = 0.0004). Within the Golden Retriever breed, these trends were matched in a cross-sectional analysis of 6 individuals that received no anxiolytic medication.
Conclusions: Aged companion dogs have slower and reduced amplitude responses in both rod- and cone-mediated ERG. Consideration of anxiolytic medication use should be made when conducting ERG studies in dogs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10633-023-09938-7 | DOI Listing |
J Vet Diagn Invest
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Department of Companion Animal Clinical Studies, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, Onderstepoort, South Africa.
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From the Research Department, Veterans Affairs Portland Health Care System, Portland, OR.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFContemp Clin Trials
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J Health Commun
December 2024
School of Public Health, San Diego State University and the Institute for Behavioral and Community Health, San Diego, California, USA.
Using a social network approach, we characterize who Mexican-origin young adults perceive as social support sources for oral health behaviors and provide additional validity evidence for Oral Health Behavior Social Support Scales (OHBSS). From April to September 2022, we gathered social network data from 62 Mexican-origin adults (21-40 years old) through Zoom interviews about their perceived received social support for three oral health behaviors (toothbrushing, flossing, and obtaining dental care) from three potential sources of support (family, health providers, and others/friends). Overall, we found similar results across all three oral health behaviors.
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