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The Role of Femoral Head Size and Femoral Head Coverage in Dogs with and without Hip Dysplasia. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hip dysplasia is a significant concern for dog owners and veterinarians
  • , primarily influenced by factors like hip laxity and joint incongruence. Studies aim to understand and reduce its prevalence through early diagnosis and healthy breeding practices.
  • This study examined the relationship between hip dysplasia and specific measurements
  • (femoral head area, femoral coverage, and cranio-caudal distance) in 264 adult dogs from three breeds. The results showed variations in these measurements by breed and sex that correlate with dysplasia status.
  • Key findings indicated that as hip dysplasia worsens, femoral head area tends to decrease
  • , with significant breed-specific differences noted, particularly amongst German wirehaired pointers, German shepherds

Article Abstract

The subject of hip dysplasia in dogs is still current and preoccupies both animal owners and veterinarians. Major factors affecting the development of the disorder are hip laxity and incongruent joints. Many studies on etiology, pathogenesis, and early diagnosis have been performed to reduce prevalence and select healthy dogs for breeding. The purpose of the present study was to investigate a possible relationship between dysplasia and femoral head area (FHA), femoral coverage by the acetabulum (CFH) and cranio-caudal distance of the dorsal acetabular rim (CrCdAR). Radiographs of a total of 264 skeletally mature dogs with similar physical characteristics (German wirehaired pointers (GWP), German shepherd dogs (GSD) and Labrador retrievers (LAB)) presented for routine hip dysplasia screening were recruited for the study. FHA, CFH and CrCdAR were measured and related to dysplasia status. Evaluations of FHA ( = 0.011), CFH ( < 0.001) and CrCdAR length ( = 0.003) measurements revealed significant interactions between breed, sex and FCI scores, so they had to be assessed separately. The results revealed that FHA tends to decrease as the hip dysplasia score worsens. There was no significant relationship between FHA and dysplasia assessment. FHA is breed-specific and is larger in normal and near-normal male ( = 0.001, = 0.020) and female ( = 0.001, = 0.013) GWP compared to GSD, respectively. FHA is greater in normal male GWP ( = 0.011) and GSD ( = 0.040) compared to females. There was a significant and strong positive correlation between FHA and CrCdAR in all breeds and sexes. Additionally, FCI scoring had a medium (GWP, GSD) to strong (LAB) negative correlation with CFH.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9961810PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci10020120DOI Listing

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