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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Early disc degeneration linked to gene in young Nova Scotia Duck

By Murphy, Brian G et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2019·Department of Pathology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Pathologic Features of the Intervertebral Disc in Young Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retrievers Confirms Chondrodystrophy Degenerative Phenotype Associated With Genotype.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A young Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever was found to have early signs of back problems due to a genetic condition called chondrodystrophy, which affects the discs in the spine. This condition leads to abnormal changes in the discs, causing pain and potential nerve issues. Researchers discovered that the dog's discs were mostly replaced by cartilage instead of the normal tissue, indicating premature degeneration. Understanding this genetic link can help veterinarians better diagnose and manage similar cases in affected breeds.

People also search for: Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever back pain · dog intervertebral disc disease · chondrodystrophy in dogs treatment

Abstract

Chondrodystrophy results in predictable and progressive biochemical and structural changes to the intervertebral disc, resulting in early onset degeneration and dystrophic mineralization of the disc. Accelerated degeneration and mineralization of the intervertebral disc are common in multiple dog breeds and can result in compromised function, herniation, pain, and a variety of neurological sequelae. A mutation responsible for chondrodystrophy in dogs has been identified as an aberrant fibroblast growth factor 4 () retrogene insertion on chromosome 12 (CFA12) and is associated with short stature of the Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever. Segregation of the CFA12retrogene in this dog breed provides an opportunity to examine the effect of retrogene presence on radiographic and histologic appearance of chondrodystrophic disc degeneration within a single breed. Here we found that in the intervertebral discs isolated from 2 dogs with the CFA12genotype, the nucleus pulposus was largely replaced by cartilaginous tissue, and physaliferous notochordal cells were rarely if ever identified. These findings are in contrast to the normal histologic findings in 2 breed-matched dogs lacking the mutation. The findings are consistent with premature chondroid degeneration of the intervertebral disc and suggest that the presence of the CFA12retrogene is sufficient to cause the chondrodystrophic phenotype.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31526126/