
It is of course possible that the clear eye test has detected another condition, not the one that the parent is DNA clear for.
For example in my own breed it is suspected that there are three forms of PRA historically found in the breed, there are now DNA tests for the most common prcd-PRA, erd (Early Retinal Degeneration) but there is not one for Rod Dysplasia.
Both erd and rd haven't been seen in the breed in UK for decades, maybe even 40 - 50 years. It took a long time for us to realise the PRA we had prcd-PRA because there were so few affecteds to research in order to develop a DNA test, or in our case find that we had the same form that a test already existed for in other breeds.
This is where the Panel testing that GEnescoper do with their MyDogDNA test panel is so useful every dog is checked for known hereditary diseases in the breed for which they have a test,b tu also EVERY DOG IS TESTED FOR EVERY OTHER DNA TEST IN THEIR PANEL.
In this way it has become apparent that Von Willebrands Type II, originally an issue in Wire Haired German Pointers, is actually found in far more breeds including my won where no-one has ever known of a case.
At first it was thought the gene mutation was only found in the Pointers, then it was found in rough and Smooth collies, and in May last year in my own breed the Norwegian Elkhound. since then it ahs also been found in Old English sheepdogs, German Spitz Chinese Crested, Lagotta Romagnola and several other breeds.
The beauty of this approach is that gene mutations can be identified in a breed before they become common place.
Normally by the time a breed realises it ahs an issue, for every 1% affected animals there are likely to be around 20% invisible carriers. To find a known gene mutation before a breed even knows it is there, means it can be managed and eradicated more effectively, without restricting the overall gene pool.