If you’re
lucky enough to have a dog or cat live into old age, you’ve seen her eyes
develop a hazy, milky appearance. It may have alarmed you because you were
worried that she had cataracts and might become blind.
What
you’re seeing is a normal age-related change referred to as nuclear sclerosis,
lenticular sclerosis, or hardening of the lens. Virtually all dogs and cats over
seven years of age have some degree of sclerosis, as do most people over 40. Yes,
you read that correctly; it will happen to you, too!
In both
people and pets, the lens in the eye continues to grow throughout life. There’s
nowhere for those extra fibers to go, so the lens becomes thicker and more
dense. The difference between seeing through young eyes vs. old eyes may be
compared to the difference between looking through a thin piece of glass vs. a
thicker chunk of glass.
The lens
focuses light onto a specific area of the retina, which allows us to see
clearly. With sclerosis, light is no longer precisely focused on that central
part of the retina, and our vision becomes blurry. And that’s what drives us to
go to Walgreens for reading glasses in our early 40s. It’s also the reason most
people get surgical lens replacement, or cataract surgery.
If I can see the
architecture of a pet’s retina through my ophthalmoscope, it’s likely that her
vision is pretty good, even if her lens is quite hazy. Often, owners of such pets
will tell me the pet has problems seeing only in low light. But sometimes I can
barely see the colorful reflection of the retina and can’t visualize the
retinal blood vessels.1 Those pets most likely have blurry vision
and may have trouble recognizing people and objects by sight.
In humans,
cataracts are considered to be a form of nuclear sclerosis, but in veterinary
medicine, we make a distinction between the two.2 Cataract
development can be a significant cause of blindness in dogs and cats, whereas
sclerosis causes less severe visual impairment. Although sclerosis occurs in
aging dogs, cataracts may occur at any age for a variety of reasons
(congenital, traumatic, age-related, metabolic, post-inflammatory). Cataracts
are corrected by surgery, whereas surgery isn’t done for sclerosis. In fact, in
spite of ads for magical nutritional supplements, there’s no treatment for
sclerosis that has been scientifically proven to be effective.
So rest
assured that your senior pet’s milky eyes most likely are not cataracts and
probably bother you more than they do
her. But don’t forget to turn the light on when she goes down a dark staircase!
1. Dogs have an amazing structure at the back of
their eyes called the tapetum. It’s a colorful reflective surface that allows
them to see in the dark. Severe sclerosis prevents much light from reaching
this reflective surface, so not only does the normally bright tapetum look hazy
to me, but also the dog doesn’t get enough light to the back of her eye to
allow her to see in low light.
2. We can usually differentiate between cataracts
and nuclear sclerosis with a visual inspection of the eyes with a light source.
Cataracts can appear as dots, stars, or other shapes and can even have a
sparkling appearance. They may start out as a diffuse haze, much like
sclerosis, but often progress and become completely opaque.