Causative Factors of Canine Hip Dysplasia
Owners must separate
fact from myth when examining theories on genetic, nutritional and environmental
factors that influence CHD.
This is the second part in a series
on canine hip dysplasia. What follows is written from the perspective that the
readers of the series are conscientious breeders who are the guardians of the
genetic pools that constitute their breeds. While this series of articles will
not replace a stack of veterinary medical texts, it is a relatively in-depth
look at the whole problem of a canine hip dysplasia. Furthermore, the series is
designed to be retained as a reference. When you finish reading it you will have
a sufficient background to make rational breeding choices and will be able to
discuss the subject from an informed basis with your veterinarian. You may not
like what you read, but you will be more competent to deal with the problem.
Conclusions from Part I:
Genetics is the foremost causative factor of canine hip dysplasia. Without the genes
necessary to transmit this degenerative disease, there is no disease. Hip dysplasia
is not something a dog gets; it either is dysplastic or it is not. An affected
animal can exhibit a wide range of phenotypes, all the way from normal to severely
dysplastic and functionally crippled. Hip dysplasia is genetically inherited.
In this article we will address the issue of genetic, nutritional and environmental
factors. We hope to debunk some of the myths and introduce some recently developed
theories.
Other diseases, infections or trauma can produce clinical signs suggestive of canine
hip dysplasia. In some breeds the animals learn to live with pain and are stoic
about letting anyone know of their pain. This stoicism seems to be especially
prevalent in terriers and northern breeds and is the case - not the exception -
in the fighting breeds. Those fanciers who participate in pulling, freighting,
carting or sledding events with their dogs should always be aware that tendonitis
or pulled muscles can cause a gait change reminiscent of hip dysplasia. Anyone
involved in lure chasing or coursing for real needs to understand that on occasion,
an animal will twist or turn the wrong way while in full chase. In the older dog,
trauma from younger years may manifest itself as arthritic deterioration. A little
bit more unusual is to have viral penetration of the joint capsule with resultant
damage to articular cartilage, or the epiphyseal surfaces of the femur. Absent
such unusual occurrences, the reality of hip dysplasia is that it is a genetically
linked condition--always was, always will be.
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THE ROLE OF GROWTH
In the first article we said that the first six months of a puppy's life seem to
be a critical time of development. The rate of growth can be astonishing. When
one thinks of the number of things that could go wrong as an Akita puppy, for
instance, goes from a birth weight of slightly more than 1 pound to 60 to 70
pounds in six months and then adds another 30 to 40 pounds by year end, it is
amazing that most dogs mature without serious problems. It is during this period
that dogs are most active. There is evidence to suggest that exercise is
necessary to retain the depth of the acetabulum. How much exercise and of what
type is unknown.
One Norwegian anecdotal study published in England in 1991 concluded that German
Wirehaired Pointer, English Setter, Irish Setter, Gordon Setter and Labrador
Retriever puppies growing up during the spring and summer had a lower incidence
rate of hip dysplasia than puppies growing up during autumn and winter. Oddly
enough, Golden Retrievers and German Shepherd Dogs did not manifest the same
seasonal pattern of incidence of hip dysplasia. 1
While this study may lack strict experimental protocol, it raises many
questions. The first question is whether there was an exercise differential
between the dogs due to weather in Norway. The second question was whether there
was different availability of sunlight necessary for vitamin D production and
utilization. The list of questions could go on, but this study is brought up to
show that there may be exercise and diet factors at play, and that various
breeds may respond to these factors in different ways. It would be reasonable to
conclude that there is probably an amount of exercise during a genotypically
dysplastic puppy's rapid growth period where phenotypic expression is mitigated,
delayed, or both. Without taking the time, cost and effort to conduct a rigorous
scientific study, it is still sometimes possible to glean valuable information
from existing, i.e., available data. Therefore, do not shy away from creating
working hypotheses from anecdotal studies; conversely, do not lock their
findings in concrete as inviolate fact.
With respect to the published scientific literature, we found nothing in Medline
(an online listing of medical and biological articles) referencing any journal
article addressing the subject of surfaces and their effects on the incidence of
hip dysplasia. While we know of breeders who write into their sales contracts
that animals must be kept on a specific surface and fed a specific feed, these
demands seem to be without scientific basis.
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There is some evidence that preventing rapid growth reduces the extent to which
the adult dog will manifest hip dysplasia. Decreasing the dog's food consumption
during its growth period seems to correlate well with normal hips. 2 The Kealy
study published in 1992 was based upon 48 8-week-old Labrador Retriever puppies.
These puppies were sex-matched littermates randomly assigned to two groups: the
first group was fed ad libitum (as much as they wanted, when they wanted to
eat); the second group was fed the same feed until they were 2 years old, but in
amounts of only 75 percent of what the first group consumed ad libitum. Thus for
every puppy fed ad libitum, there was a same-sex littermate on a restricted
diet. This rigid protocol gives this study great respectability and credence.
The accompanying chart gives the findings in tabular form. Note the tremendous
increase in normal animals at two years of age when kept on a restricted diet
for those two years. This ought to more than suggest that overweight animals are
at risk for phenotypic expression of canine hip dysplasia.
Radiographic
Evaluation
Method |
Group 1
Ad Libitum Feeding |
Group 2
75% of Ad Libitum Feeding |
| Dysplasic |
Normal |
% Normal |
Dysplasic |
Normal |
% Normal |
OFA
Swedish |
16
18 |
8
6 |
33%
25% |
7
5 |
17
19 |
71%
79% |
Many researchers conclude that early fusion may lead to bone and
cartilage deviations which then could predispose the animal to future dysplasia.
An important point that these studies illustrate is that it is possible to
improve the individual phenotype of dogs whose parents carried the gene for hip
dysplasia (genotypically dysplastic).
In the first article we alluded to joint laxity as being present
whenever there is canine hip dysplasia. Given that joint laxity is at least one
of the factors governing the onset of hip dysplasia, then any process that
retards this condition could possibly minimize the severity of the disease. It
also is conceivable that retardation of joint laxity could delay the onset of
the physical appearance of the disease.
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FEED FOR HEALTH
A recent study (1993) showed that coxofemoral joint stability
was improved in dogs that were fed increased levels of chloride and decreased
levels of sodium and potassium. 3 In the eight-part "Feed That Dog!"
series (Dog World, July 1993 through February 1994) we emphasized
repeatedly the importance of the ratio of sodium and chlorine, with a ratio of
1.5 sodium to chlorine being accepted as the dietary requirement. 4
We noted also that "sodium chloride deficiency is manifested by fatigue,
decreased utilization of protein, decreased water Intake, inability to maintain
water balance, retarded growth, dryness of skin and loss of hair." 5
Potassium deficiency " results in poor growth, restlessness, muscular paralysis,
a tendency toward dehydration, and lesions of the heart and kidney." 6
We cautioned that "prednisone, a steroid commonly prescribed for various skin
allergies, causes a loss of potassium and retention of sodium, and retention of
sodium can cause further loss of potassium." 7
Calcium (Ca), sodium (Na), and potassium (K) are the
electrolytes considered most important, as they are necessary to many biological
functions. Electrolytes are atoms or molecules that carry either a negative or a
positive charge. Anions have an extra electron, and thus carry a negative
charge. Cations are missing an electron, thus they carry a positive charge. In
the study cited, Kealy et. Al. Introduced the theory of "dietary anion gap" or
DAG. 8 The researchers explained DAG as the amount of chloride ion
subtracted from the sum of sodium ion and potassium ions:
DAG = [(K+ + Na+) - Cl-]
This experiment, consisting of the raising of 167 puppies,
included puppies from five different breeds. They were placed on three different
diets tat varied only in their DAG content. Examples of low DAG ingredients are
rice with a DAG of 6 and corn gluten meal with a DAG of 5. The result of this
experiment showed that except for some breed-specific exceptions, those dogs
that were fed a lower DAG diet had better hips at 30 weeks than those fed a diet
with a higher DAG content. Differences in DAG balance did not result in
different rates of weight gain. This is important, for it allowed elimination of
weight gain as a Causative factor in the study. Hips were evaluated by their
degree of subluxation as measured by the Norberg angle. The Norberg angle is the
"angle included between a line connecting the femoral head centers and a line
from the femoral head center to the crainiodorsal acetabular rim." 9
The greater the Norberg angle, the less the subluxation. Norberg angles are
commonly measured as <90 degrees for loose hips and >105 degrees for tight hips.
Those dogs with better hips at 30 weeks also had good hips at 2 years of age.
Unfortunately, the researchers were unable to explain the
mechanism or the "why" of how they got the results they did. One of the theories
proposed was that a lower DAG somehow affected the pH or "acidity" of the
synovial fluid. This in turn affected the osmolality or "thickness" of the
synovial fluid. The osmolality of a fluid depends upon the number of dissolved
particles in it, and is the measure of the osmotic pressure. In previous
studies, a higher osmolality was associated with the greater synovial fluid
volume found in dysplastic dogs. Note, of course, that there is a normal range
of DAG values in a balanced diet. Leaving that range while formulating a dog
food, for example, could cause serious problems.
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CALCIUM
The question of calcium supplementation while controversial
among breeders, is fairly easy to answer: don't do it. It is not necessary to
add extra calcium to your dog's diet. Not only is calcium an essential skeletal
component, it is also necessary for blood coagulation, hormonal release and
muscle contraction. The three biological systems involved in controlling The
amount of calcium in the blood are bones, kidneys, and the intestine.
Calcium is constantly being recycled in and out of living bone.
In the adult dog, under balanced conditions, both accretion (calcium uptake) and
resorption (calcium loss from bone) values vary from 0.1 to 0.2 mmol per
kilogram of body weight per day. [A millimole is a minute measure of molecular
weight.] For the rapidly growing puppy these values are at least 100 times
higher. 10 Another difference between an adult dog and a puppy is
their relative abilities to absorb calcium from the food they ingest. In the
adult dog, the percentage of calcium assimilated from food varies from 0 to 90
percent, depending upon the composition of the food and its calcium content.
11
A 1985 study which examined the physical, biochemical and
calcium metabolic changes in growing Great Danes, showed that young puppies do
not have a mechanism to protect themselves against excessive calcium feeding.
Under the influence of certain hormones, the calcium excess is routed to the
bones. This results in severe pathological consequences for the patterning for
the growing skeleton and the subsequent impairment of gait. Strongly correlated
with high calcium intake is disturbed enchrondral ossification (growth plate
anomalies) causing the clinical appearance of radius curvus syndrome and
osteochondrosis (a disturbance of bone formation within the cartilage, occurring
during periods of maximum growth). 12 Chronic, high calcium intake in
large breed dogs has also been associated with hypercalcemia, elevation of the
liver enzyme alkaline phosphatase, retardation of bone maturation, an increase
in bone volume, a decrease in the number of bone resorption cells, and delayed
maturation of cartilage. 13 We can safely conclude that calcium plays
a significant role in skeletal disease. The giant breed dogs, because of their
rapid and intense growth, are sentinels for nutritionally influenced diseases.
These changes, while exaggerated in the giant breeds, are just as real-though
they may be slower to surface and not as easily identified-in the smaller
breeds.
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VITAMIN C
Vitamin C (L-ascorbic acid) has frequently made it into the
literature along with calcium. At one time or another vitamin C has been touted
by somebody as a cure-all for virtually any malady known to man and beast. This
is not discount the requirements for vitamin C, for it is absolutely necessary.
Fortunately for dogs, they produce an enzyme called L-gulonolactone oxidase,
which allows them to synthesize vitamin C from glucose without having access to
a dietary form of vitamin C. (A deficiency could only be the result of either a
problem with absorption or an increased need.) Interestingly, canines produce
only 40mg of ascorbate per kilogram of body weight, which is far less than other
mammals with the ability to synthesize their own vitamin C. There is no
established minimum daily requirement for vitamin C in canine nutrition. That
said, let's look at the function of the vitamin C the dog manufactures.
Vitamin C figures prominently in the biosynthesis of collagen.
14 Collagen is an important structural protein in the body. There are
different types of collagen, but it is Type I collagen that appears most often
in connective tissue, particularly in bone and ligaments. Vitamin C adds an -OH
group to the two amino acids proline and lysine. Without this functional group
there is a decrease in the number of cross-links in collagen. Without this
cross-linking, the melting temperature of the protein is reduced from about 39
degrees to 23 degrees centigrade. In other words, without the cross-links this
protein can be denatured at body temperatures.
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There is experimental evidence that vitamin C may play a role in
bone mineralization by stimulating bone resorption. What has been shown by one
researcher to be efficacious in treating the physical manifestations of canine
hip dysplasia (CHD) is a form of vitamin C called polyascorbate. 15
Calcium ascorbate, used in conjunction with vitamin E, also is considered
helpful in reducing the inflammatory processes that accompany the disease. In
this form, vitamin C is taken up by the bone along with calcium, and this acts
like a time release factor that keeps the blood plasma concentration high and
the cells constantly "bathed" with vitamin C.
With all the continuing fuss about vitamin C in the fad
literature, it was inevitable that it would be tried for treatment of hip
dysplasia. Belfield (1976) conducted a somewhat anecdotal study on eight German
Shepherd Dog litters of puppies from dysplastic parents or parents known to have
produced dysplastic puppies. 16 Megadoses of ascorbate were given to
dams (2 to 4 grams of sodium ascorbate crystals per day) and to the pups (birth
to 3 weeks-calcium and vitamin E supplement; 3 weeks to 4 months-500 grams
ascorbate per day; 4 months to 1.5 to 2.0 years-1 to 2 grams ascorbate per day).
Belfield claimed that none of the pups developed hip dysplasia, and breeders
involved with the research were so convinced that they guaranteed dysplasia-free
puppies if the ascorbate therapy was followed by the new owner. It is
significant to note that no follow-up studies were published. While this is
interesting, there is little accepted hard evidence to suggest that
supplementation with ascorbate can prevent or ameliorate canine hip dysplasia.
Readers are cautioned that large doses of vitamin C are not considered
mainstream prophylaxis or therapy. The truth of the matter is that it is in the
genes, not the diet, though diet may play a minor part.
A recent study (1993) observed that synovial fluid volume as
related to osmolality correlated highly with the incidence of hip dysplasia.
17 This suggested that the swelling of the joint capsule from excess
fluid pressure might be forcing the femoral head out of position in the
acetabulum.
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TISSUE CHANGES
Before any radiographic indications appear, there are structural
changes at the tissue level of muscles, ligaments and cartilage. Cellular
changes and molecular changes occur both in the joint capsule and in the
synovial fluid. One study suggested that one of the first observable changes of
the disease process is hypertrophy or swelling of the pectineus muscle fibers.
18 This hypertrophy is thought to be a compensatory adaptation to
extreme contractile tensions and may be the result of the muscle mass trying to
hold the acetabulum and the femoral head in the proper position.
Another study showed that the composition of the pectineus
muscle was significantly different between 2-month-old puppies that eventually
developed normal hips, and those that were dysplastic by 24 months. 19
The two groups differed by the size of the muscle fibers, but this time, the
dysplastic animals had smaller than normal muscle fibers (hypotrophy) and the
ratio between contractile tissue and non-contractile tissue was lower. Thus, not
only did the affected animals have diminished capacity to contract their
muscles, their muscles were also less elastic. This study begs the question of
joint laxity: Once stretched, would the muscles tend to remain stretched, thus
resulting in a looser hip joint? Unfortunately, it cannot be said with any
certainty whether these differences are causal or correlative.
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It is certain, however, that hip dysplasia is characterized by
joint laxity. 20,21,22,23,24 Whether such laxity is the result of the
pathological processes involved in the disease, or whether the laxity is the
cause of the disease, cannot be determined. Remember, however, that loose joints
and hip dysplasia are found together. We will be coming back to this point in
later articles. There is a little twist to what we find: All dogs that have hip
dysplasia have loose hips, but not all dogs with loose hips have hip dysplasia.
It is not known which comes first: remodeling of the bony surfaces leading to
abnormal wear of articular surfaces and joint instability or vice versa. It may
very well be that both processes are concurrent and/or iterative processes.
Other changes that can precede either clinical signs, like pain
and gait abnormalities, or radiographic evidence of hip dysplasia include
thickening of the joint capsule and swelling of the round ligament. Subtle and
early changes in articular cartilage structure also precede clinical signs.
Specifically, in affected animals, the ratio between Type A cells and Type B
cells differs from the norm. Type A cells are macrophages, i.e., large
mononuclear cells produced by the immune system which ingest damaged cells and
blood tissue. Type B cells are fibroblasts which are precursors of connective
tissue. In one study, the population of Type A cells increased. 25
Conceptually this makes sense, as the function of macrophages is to scavenge
damaged cells, which would be the case if articular cartilage is being damaged.
Note that these changes can only be observed after dissection and examination
under an electron microscope. While diagnostic and predictive, such examination
is without use to the clinician who is trying to diagnose the disorder. What is
important to remember is that these changes are found in dogs whose x-rays
showed them to be perfectly normal at the time of radiographic study. As a
concerned breeder or fancier of dogs, this should alarm you. Do not be too
alarmed, however, because there is hope for predictive techniques. These will be
covered in later articles in this series.
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SIGNIFICANT STUDIES
The major study demonstrating the polygenic and multifactorial
aspects of canine hip dysplasia is probably the 1991 German study an German
Shepherd Dogs. 26 Unfortunately this article is in German and we know
of no translations available. While this poses no problem for co-author
Thorpe-Vargas, as she used to be at the Max Planck Institute in Germany, it is a
real problem for co-author Cargill, as he has to take her word for it, supported
only by Medline abstracts in English! The importance of this study is that it
covered 10,595 dogs. Furthermore, this study attempted to quantify both
environmental influences and genetic influences on the frequency of hip
dysplasia. Models were developed using the following variables-independent
random variables: age at X-raying, birth year, season, litter size, percent of
X-rayed dogs in each litter and sex ratio of litter; independent fixed
variables: sire and dam.
Through multiple linear and non-linear regression methods it was
shown that sire, dam, sex and age at X-raying all showed statistically
significant influence on the occurrence of hip dysplasia. The heritability
indices (H2) were-Relationship: full siblings, H2 = 0.30;
maternal half-siblings, H2 = 0.48; and paternal half-siblings, H2
= 0.11.
The researchers' caveat at the end of the study was that only
the paternal half siblings' heritability index should be accepted because kennel
and breeder effects are confounded with the dam effect. Their overall conclusion
was that the frequency of hip dysplasia could be reduced if selection for
breeding based upon the estimation of breeding values (H2) with
respect to the frequency of hip dysplasia in all relatives was
implemented.
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Many of the world's militaries are good sources of information
on German Shepherd Dogs. The goals of such organizations have been to improve
behavioral traits and to reduce the frequency of CHD. One of the more
interesting studies in the literature is the one based uopn information provided
by the US Army's division of Biosensor Research on the German Shepherd Dogs bred
between 1968 and 1976.27 Detailed records were available for 575
animals representing 4 years, 18 sires, 71 dams and 48 human handlers. Variance
component estimates were made, which allowed estimates of the heritabilities for
both temperament and CHD scores to be made. The heritability index (H2)
for temperament was 0.51 and for CHD was 0.26. Interestingly, in this population
the genetic correlation between good temperament and bad hips was -0.33. Given
the selection process of the U.S. Army, it was not surprising to find that dogs
with good temperaments also had good hips. Because of the extremely high
heritability index for temperament, records of the animal being evaluated can be
used for repeat breeding selection rather than the records of the progeny.
A 1993 Austrian dissertation looked at a population of 10,750
Hovawarts from 1962 to 1988, out of which CHD findings were available for 4,387
dogs. 28 The goal of the dissertation was to statistically calculate
two parameters. The first was a prediction coefficient based upon the CHD
findings of all the ancestors of a specific animal. The second was a "taint"
coefficient calculated on the basis of the CHD findings of all ancestors as well
as of the individual CHD finding as well as those of any offspring already
checked for CHD. The conclusions of this dissertation were that both the
"prediction" and "taint" coefficients were useful in calculating the relative
CHD risk of the prospective offspring when selecting breeding partners. A
connection was found between the CHD findings and the inbreeding level of an
animal as calculated from the "ancestor loss coefficient" and Malecots
"coefficient de parente." Thus, increasing levels of inbreeding increase the
risk of CHD. There was no difference between males and females for risk of CHD.
Detailed coverage of the various genetic coefficients is beyond the scope of
this article. Readers are directed to modern comprehensive texts, dissertation
abstracts and the like in genetics should more than a passing familiarity with
the intricacies of these coefficients be required.
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Conclusions:
While environmental effects, to include nutrition
and exercise, may play a part in mitigating or delaying the onset of clinical
signs and clinical symptoms hip dysplasia remains a genetically transmitted
disease. Only by rigorous genetic selection will the incidence rate be reduced.
In the meantime, it makes sense to have lean puppies that are exercised
regularly and to avoid breeding any animals from litters that showed signs of
hip dysplasia. It is probable that even normal exercise levels may increase the
phenotypic expression of CHD of a genetically predisposed dog. Stay away from
calcium supplementation of any kind; all it can do is hurt. There is no
conclusive evidence tat vitamin C can prevent hip dysplasia, but there is some
evidence that vitamin C may be useful in reducing pain and inflammation in the
dysplastic dog. Let your conscience and your veterinarian be your guides in
supplementing with vitamin C. Fortunately, large doses of vitamin C are readily
excreted, but it is still possible to cause untoward side effects with megadoses.
The next article in the series will address the abnormal hip, to
include differential diagnosis, observation, palpation fluid sampling and
sedated and unsedated radiographic studies.
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CREDITS
References
Hanssen I. "Hip Dysplasia in dogs in relation to their month
of birth." Vet Rec. 1991 May 4;128(18):425-6.
Kealy R.D., Olsson S.E., Monti K.L., Lawler D.F., Biery D.N., Helms R.W.,
Lust G., Smith G.K. "Effects of limited food consumption on the incidence of hip
dysplasia in growing dogs." J Am Vet Med Assoc. 1992 September
15;201(6):857-63.
Kealy R.D., Olsson S.E., Monti K.L., Lawler D.F., Biery D.N., Helms R.W.,
Lust G., Smith G.K. "Effects of dietary electrolyte balance on subluxation of
the femoral head in growing dogs." Am J Vet Res. 1993
April:54(4):555-62.
Cargill J.C. "Feed That Dog! Part II." Dog World. 1993 August;75(8):12.
Ibid.
Ibid.
Ibid.
"Effects of dietary electrolyte balance." Pp. 555-62.
Smith G.K., Gregor T.P., Rhodes W.H. Biery D.N. "Coxofemoral joint laxity
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conventional hip-extended radiography in dogs."" Am J Vet Res. 1993
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Hedhammer A., Wu F.M., Krook L., Schryver H.F., de Lahunta A., Wahlen J.P.,
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Hazewinkle H.A.W. "Influence of different calcium intakes on calcium
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Berge, G.E. "Polyascorbat, et behandlings-alternativ ved kroniske
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Lust G., Beilman W.T., Rendanom V.t. "A relationship between degree of
laxity and synovial fluid volume in coxofemoral joints of dogs predisposed for
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Cardinet, G.H. III, Wallace L.J., Fedde M.R. "Developmental myopathy in the
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Lust G., Craig P.H., Ross G.E. "Studies on pectineal muscles in canine hip
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Henricscon B., Norberg I., Olsson S.E. "On the etiology and pathogenesis of
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Smith G.K., Biery D.N., Gregor T.P. "New concepts of coxofemoral joint
stability and the development of a clinical stress radiographic method for
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"Coxofemoral joint laxityPp.1021-1042.
Morgan S.J. "The pathology of canine hip dysplasia." Vet Clin N.Am Sm
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Alexander J.W. "The pathogenesis of canine hip dysplasia." Vet Clin N.Am
Sm Anim Pract. 1992 May;22(3):503-11.
Greisen H.A., Summers B.A., Lust, G. "Ultra Structure of the Articular
Cartilage and Syunovium in the Early Stages of Degenerative Joint Disease in
Canine Hip Joints." Am J Vet Res. 1982; 43:pp. 1963-1971.
Distl O., Grussler W., Schwarz J., Karusslich H. "Analyse umweltbedingter un
genetischer Einflusse auf die Haufigkeit von Huftgelenksdysplasie beim Deutschen
Shaferhund." ("Analysis of environmentally conditioned and genetic influences on
the frequency of hip joint dysplasia in German Shepherd Dogs"). Zentralbl
Veterinarmed A. 1991 Jul;38(6):460-71.
Mackenzie S.A. "Inheritance of temperament and hip dysplasia scores in
German Shepherd Dogs." 1984 March; Dissertation Abstracts International-B 44/09,
p.2652.
Potscher L.A. "Selektion gengen hueftgelenksdysplasies (HD) in einer
Hovawart population" "Selection criteria concerning hip dysplasia (HD) in a
Hovawart population.") 1993 Winter; Dissertation Abstracts International-C
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