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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Neutering age affects risk of ligament tears in Labradors

By DeForge, Teagan L et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2025·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Age of neutering contributes to risk of cruciate ligament rupture in Labrador Retrievers.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study found that neutering Labrador Retrievers before they turn one year old can increase their risk of cruciate ligament rupture, which is a common knee injury in dogs. Researchers looked at 93 dogs and discovered that those neutered early were more likely to develop this injury compared to those neutered later. Other factors like sex or being an active dog didn’t seem to affect the risk. This information can help pet owners and vets make better decisions about when to neuter their Labradors to potentially reduce the chance of this injury.

People also search for: Labrador cruciate ligament rupture risk · when to neuter a Labrador · dog knee injury prevention

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Cruciate ligament rupture (CR) in Labrador Retrievers is a complex polygenic disease with high heritability. The environmental contribution to CR risk remains poorly characterized. An accurate genetic risk test for CR in the Labrador Retriever has been developed. This enables evaluation of environmental risk with knowledge of genetic disease predisposition through study of dogs with phenotypic disease status that is discordant with their genetic risk. The objective of this study was to identify environmental factors that contribute to CR in Labrador Retrievers through evaluation of dogs with clinical phenotypes that are discordantly predicted with the use of genetic markers. METHODS: Dogs were prospectively recruited between January 2013 and December 2022. To study discordant subjects, case dogs with a posterior risk probability value < 0.75 and control dogs with a posterior risk probability of > 0.25, determined with the use of an average of 8 statistical models, were selected. The environmental factors investigated were neuter status, age of neuter, withers height measured at the dorsal-most ridge between the scapulae, weight, body mass index, and athletic activity. RESULTS: Ninety three dogs were discordant: 58 dogs were discordant CR cases, and 35 dogs were discordant CR controls. Neutering before 12 months of age was a significant risk factor for CR development. Sex, neuter status, or status as an athlete was not associated with CR risk. CONCLUSIONS: Neutering before 12 months of age influences risk of CR in Labrador Retrievers. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This information can inform management decisions about Labrador Retrievers regarding age of neutering, body condition, and athletic activity. The primary factor influencing CR development in Labrador Retrievers is polygenic intrinsic genetic risk.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39383890/