Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Common diseases and causes of loss in New Zealand farm dogs
By Cave, N J et al.·Published in New Zealand veterinary journal·2009·Institute of Veterinary·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A survey of diseases of working farm dogs in New Zealand.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A survey of working farm dogs in New Zealand found that many of them suffer from various health issues, including trauma from accidents and specific diseases. Huntaway dogs were particularly prone to problems like constipation and gastric dilatation-volvulus (GDV), while Heading dogs often faced injuries to their legs and hips. The study highlighted that many injuries were caused by interactions with livestock, car accidents, or even other dogs. To help reduce these issues, changes in nutrition, neutering, and safer practices around fences could be beneficial.
People also search for: farm dog health problems · Huntaway constipation treatment · GDV in dogs prevention · dog leg injuries causes · working dog trauma care
Abstract
AIMS: To record the incidence of specific diseases affecting working farm dogs; identify any apparent breed predispositions; determine the most important causes of loss from death, euthanasia, or retirement of the dog; and identify potential interventions that could reduce the incidence of disease. METHODS: A national questionnaire-based cross-sectional study was conducted to identify the incidence of specific diseases, and circumstances of trauma affecting working farm dogs that presented to rural veterinary practices over a 12-month period, between April 2008 and April 2009. The practices were convenience-sampled on the basis of geography and size. RESULTS: Sixty-six practices were approached, and veterinarians from 30 practices agreed to participate, with representation from all major rural regions of New Zealand. Data were provided on 2,214 presentations, excluding revisits, of which 51% were for Huntaways and 39% Heading dogs. Trauma was identified as a cause of injury in 848 (38%) visits. Huntaways were apparently over-represented in cases of constipation, gastric dilatation-volvulus (GDV), theriogenological problems, laryngitis, hip dysplasia, and degenerative lumbosacral disease. In contrast, Heading dogs were over-represented among cases of multiple ligamentous injury of the stifle, disruption of the gastrocnemius or Achilles tendon, tarsal injuries, and hip luxation. Traumatic injury involved injury by stock (20%), automotive incidents (19%), transit across fence lines (16%), and dog bites (12%). Loss occurred following 10% of visits, of which trauma was known to be involved in 32%. The most important non-traumatic causes of loss were GDV, degenerative joint disease, mammary neoplasia and diseases involving the female reproductive tract, cardiac disease, and poisoning. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Several important diseases appear amenable to intervention through nutrition, neutering, or behavioural modification, including constipation, GDV, theriogenological problems, dog-bite injuries, and laryngitis. Altering modes of transit across fence lines has the potential to reduce large numbers of serious orthopaedic injuries to working farm dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19966889/