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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Hip dysplasia risk linked to growth in four large dog breeds in Norway

By Krontveit, Randi I et al.·Published in Preventive veterinary medicine·2010·Department of Companion Animal Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A prospective study on canine hip dysplasia and growth in a cohort of four large breeds in Norway (1998-2001).

Species:
dog
Hip dysplasiaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A study followed 501 puppies from four large breeds—Newfoundlands, Leonbergers, Labrador Retrievers, and Irish Wolfhounds—to see how weight and growth rates affected the risk of developing hip dysplasia (a common joint problem). Surprisingly, the results showed that heavier and faster-growing dogs were not at a higher risk for hip dysplasia than lighter and slower-growing ones. In fact, the risk varied by breed, with Newfoundlands having the highest incidence at 36%, while Irish Wolfhounds had the lowest at 10%. The findings suggest that other environmental factors may play a role in hip dysplasia risk, and more research is needed to understand this better.

People also search for: dog hip dysplasia risk factors · Labrador Retriever growth rate · Newfoundland hip problems · Irish Wolfhound joint health

Abstract

The study-objective was to measure the effect of weight and growth related parameters on the risk of development of Canine Hip Dysplasia (CHD). The hypothesis was that heavy and fast growing dogs of large sized breeds were at increased risk of development of CHD compared to lighter and slower growing dogs. A prospective cohort study was conducted among dogs of four large breeds: Newfoundland (NF), Leonberger (LEO), Labrador retriever (LR), and Irish wolfhound (IW). The dogs were privately owned with individualized nutrition and environment, and they were followed from birth and throughout the growth period until the official screening for CHD was performed. The study sample consisted of 501 dogs from 103 litters, with the breed distribution 125 NF, 180 LEO, 133 LR, and 63 IW. Because the dogs were clustered in litters a multivariable random effects logistic regression model was used to assess statistically significant growth-related risk factors for CHD. The estimated incidence risk of CHD was 36% in NF, 25% in LEO, 20% in LR, and 10% in IW. Based upon the final multilevel model it appears that the odds of CHD among both LR and IW (odds ratio (OR) 0.22) are about one-fifth of the odds for NF. The odds for LEO (OR 0.60) are not significantly different from NF. There appeared to be an inverse relationship between body weight at 3 months of age and odds of CHD, with an OR of 0.89 (P=0.044). The degree of clustering at the litter-level was high (22.6%) and highly significant (P<0.001). Findings failed to support the hypothesis that heavy and fast growing dogs from four large sized breeds were at increased risk for development of CHD. There might be other unmeasured environmental risk factors for CHD in this cohort of dogs, although the contribution of the genetic variance to the litter-level clustering also needs further investigation.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20956024/