Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Mild hemophilia A linked to factor VIII marker in Golden Retrievers
By Brooks, Marjory B et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2005·Department of Population Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Cosegregation of a factor VIII microsatellite marker with mild hemophilia A in Golden Retriever dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of Golden Retrievers was found to have mild hemophilia A, which means they have a deficiency in a blood-clotting factor that can lead to prolonged bleeding after injuries or surgeries. In this study, 30 dogs were examined, and 12 males showed signs of this condition. Genetic testing revealed a specific marker associated with hemophilia A, helping to identify carrier dogs among the group. This information can assist breeders in managing and reducing the risk of hemophilia A in future litters.
People also search for: Golden Retriever hemophilia A symptoms · dog bleeding after surgery · genetic testing for dog hemophilia
Abstract
Mild hemophilia A (factor VIII deficiency) was diagnosed in Golden Retrievers and pedigree studies were undertaken to test the cosegregation of an intragenic factor VIII marker with the disease phenotype. The study population consisted of 30 client-owned dogs (22 males and 8 females). Hemophilic males (n = 12) typically demonstrated prolonged bleeding after trauma or surgery rather than spontaneous hemorrhagic events. The affected males had a proportionate reduction in factor VIII coagulant activity (mean FVIII:C = 4%) and factor VIII protein concentration (mean FVIII:Ag = 3%). Twenty-five dogs (10 affected males, 8 clear males, 2 obligate carrier dams, and 5 suspect carrier daughters) were genotyped for a factor VIII microsatellite marker, with allele size assigned by an automated capillary electrophoresis system. Five distinct marker alleles were present in the study pedigree and a 300-base pair allele was found to segregate with the hemophilia A phenotype. The inheritance of the hemophilia-associated allele defined carrier status for 5 suspect daughters of obligate carrier dams. The limitations inherent to linkage analyses (i.e., lack of access to key family members and homozygosity at the marker locus) did not preclude carrier detection in this pedigree. We conclude that genotype analysis for the intragenic factor VIII marker can aid in control of canine hemophilia A through enhanced carrier detection.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15822565/