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CERF’s Up Everybody!

By Jo-Ann Secondino

Now don’t start reaching for the Sunscreen and Boogie boards, instead look up your nearest Veterinary Ophthalmologist to schedule your Icelandic Sheepdog’s annual eye exam. CERF or Canine Eye Registration Foundation, was founded in 1974 by a group of concerned purebred dog owners who found that their breeds were plagued by heritable eye disease. In co-operation with the American College of Veterinary Ophthalmologists (ACVO), they have begun a national database of dogs and breeds with hopes that Canine eye disease will be a thing of the past. This database provides breeders and breed clubs the information needed to make good breeding choices in regards to inherited eye disease.

A CERF exam is a quick and painless process for you and your dog, not to mention it’s just one more place to show off your fabulous Icelandic Sheepdog. The dog’s eyes are dilated by the administering of eye drops, and the eyes examined. Your Ophthalmologist will be looking for eye disease affecting one of seven categories: A. The Eyelids B. The Third Eyelid C. The Cornea D. The Iris E. The Lens F. The Vitreous G. The Fundus .

You’ll receive your exam results right then and there, no chewing your fingernails for weeks wondering about your Icelandic Sheepdogs eye health with these guys. If your dog shows no sign of eye disease then just fill out the back of the exam form, enclose $10.50 for CERF’s registration fee and mail it off to the address printed on the form for your CERF number. If eye disease is detected you’ll receive counseling from the Veterinary Ophthalmologist and CERF on how to proceed in the future. In both cases the information provided by your exam will go to CERF’s anonymous national database to track eye disease occurrence and frequency in our breed.

In compliance with the Breeding Guidelines set down by the ISAA all Icelandic Sheepdogs in a breeding program are required to be CERF tested. This will insure that appropriate mates can be found in an attempt to prevent any new occurrences of heritable eye disease in our breed. As eye disease can develop at anytime during a dog's life, your CERF number is good for only one year, and covers any matings which occur within that year.

Those with Retirees, spayed or neutered pets should also go for periodic CERF exams as well. Your lovely Retiree at age 6 may have developed a heritable form of cataract even though her CERF exams done during her breeding career had been clean. This can help to shape the breeding plans for her breeding age offspring.

Your spayed or neutered pet may never have had offspring but they can still contribute valuable information about the breed by getting tested. It may be found that they have a heritable condition that their littermates are unaffected by but are possibly carrying the gene for, This information could go into the ISAA’s BreedMate profiles to help their owners make better breeding choices.

For more information about CERF or American College of Veterinary Ophthalmologist exam locations visit online at www.vmdb.org there is also a link for CERF locations on the ISAA website www.icelanddogs.com Or you can inquire with your local vet about nearby AVCO clinics and offices.

It’s up to all of us to ensure that our Icelandic Sheepdogs stay bright eyed and bushy tailed for generations to come.

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