Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Patellar luxation trends in Dutch Flat-Coated Retrievers 1990-2007
By Lavrijsen, I C M et al.·Published in Animal genetics·2013·Department of Clinical Sciences of Companion Animals, Netherlands·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Phenotypic and genetic trends of patellar luxation in Dutch Flat-Coated Retrievers.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study found that about 24% of Dutch Flat-Coated Retrievers have patellar luxation, which is when the kneecap slips out of place, causing limping or difficulty walking. This condition was more common in female dogs and often affected one leg more than the other. While a screening program helped reduce the number of affected dogs from 28% to 18%, progress has slowed recently. Breeding dogs with patellar luxation can increase the chances of passing this issue to their puppies, so it's important for owners to be aware of this risk.
People also search for: Dutch Flat-Coated Retriever patellar luxation symptoms · dog limping on back leg · patellar luxation treatment for dogs · breeding dogs with knee problems
Abstract
Canine patellar luxation has been described in various dog breeds, with high prevalence especially in smaller dogs. Most dogs suffer from medial displacement of the patella, although in larger dogs lateral displacement is also seen. A sex predisposition has been described for females. Patellar luxation is considered a polygenic, multifactorial disorder. From 1990 to 2007, in total 3834 Flat-Coated Retrievers were screened; 23.6% of those animals were affected with patellar luxation. Lateral displacement of the patella was most common in this breed (61% of cases), whereas medial (31% of cases) and lateral and medial (8% of cases) were less common. Unilateral involvement (51% of cases) was just as often observed as was bilateral involvement (49% of cases). Females were more often affected with patellar luxation (30% of all tested females) than were males (17% of all tested males). The heritability of patellar luxation was 0.17 ± 0.03 in this population, and breeding with one affected parent increased the prevalence of patellar luxation in offspring by 45% compared to that with two unaffected parents. Since the start of the screening program, there was an initial decrease from 28% to 18% in incidence, but this stagnated thereafter. The annual average estimated breeding values followed the same pattern. With approximately one quarter of the Dutch Flat-Coated Retrievers being affected with patellar luxation, this population shows unusually high prevalence compared with reports in other large-breed dogs. The heritability for patellar luxation in this population was moderate (0.17), indicating that environmental factors play a large role in the manifestation of the disorder. A screening program reduced the prevalence of patellar luxation in this breed, but improvement has recently stagnated. Inclusion of breeding values in the screening program could improve its effectiveness.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24033452/