.
Mileen
Coulter, owner of Fancypoo4u.com, which
sells purebred poodles, started breeding
Yorkipoos (Yorkshire terrier/ poodle) and
Maltipoos after realizing the dogs could
bring her at least as much as a purebred.
CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL ARTICLE
OR READ THE
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MAKE SURE YOU
VISIT OUR GENETICS PAGE
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION IS ON MILEEN WEBSITE
The RENAL DYSPLASIA Test isn't
available any more, because there just wasn't enough information
THIS
IS OUR RESPONSE: YOU ARE CORRECT AT THIS TIME THEY ARE NOT DOING ANY
TESTING, BUT THERE ARE TEST THAT THE VET CAN DO TO MAKE SURE THE PARENTS ARE
NOT SHOWING ANY SIGNS OF THIS HORRIBLE DISEASE. BEFORE YOU BREED THEM.
GREAT ARTICLE HERE
http://clubs.akc.org/astc/health/astchlth/genemap/
RENAL DYSPLASIA IN SHIH TZU
Renal dysplasia is a developmental or genetic defect of the kidneys. This
makes it quite different from common forms of kidney disease which occur in
adult or aged dogs and from other diseases and/or drugs which may cause
inflammation of the kidneys and abnormal results on blood and urine tests of
kidney function. Dogs affected with renal dysplasia have had an embryonic arrest
in kidney development at some time around birth. The immature nephrons normally
found in young puppies persist throughout life. Also, some nephron units do not
develop and are replaced with fibrous tissue. There may be diffuse interstitial
fibrosis in the cortex and medula, reduced numbers of glomeruli, dilated and
hypoplastic tubules, and a variety of sizes of glomeruli. The disease is found
most commonly in Shih Tzu and Lhasa Apsos, although it is also present, with
less frequency, in several other breeds.
The disease usually progresses in three stages, each of which may have a
variable and independent time course. Stage one is the silent destruction and
loss of nephrons over a period of months and years in the absence of symptoms.
Stage two occurs when approximately 30% of functioning nephrons remain and
clinical symptoms (excessive thirst and volume of urine, weight loss, lack of
vigor, and intermittent loss of appetite) are first obvious. This stage may
persist for months or years. In the final stage, vomiting, weakness,
dehydration, and severe debilitation are added to second stage symptoms, and
death from renal failure (uremia) is the eventual outcome.
One may become suspicious of renal dysplasia in puppies older than eight
weeks if excessive thirst, excessive volumes of urine, and pale urine are
noticeable. Normal Shih Tzu puppies drink approximately one ounce of water per
pound of body weight daily when eight to ten weeks of age, but dogs with severe
renal dysplasia may drink as much as five times that quantity. Such puppies may
also demonstrate reduced body weight and stature compared to normal puppies.
They commonly weigh less than three pounds at five months of age and progress to
renal failure quickly. Moderately affected puppies may appear normal until five
or six months of age and then follow the same course, with chronic debilitation
and death at nine to twelve months. Many animals with the disease, however, are
only slightly affected and will live a normal life with normal renal function.
Nevertheless, they can pass on some degree of the defect to their offspring.
BUN and creatinine, the two common blood tests of renal function, are not
elevated until 70 to 75% of the kidney is nonfunctioning, and therefore are of
little use in identifying mildly or moderately affected dogs. Having a BUN and
creatinine in the normal range means that the dog has at least 30% kidney
function. It does not mean that the dog is free of renal dysplasia. Elevated BUN
and creatinine readings may also be caused by other renal problems, but these
tests can be of some use in identifying severely affected dogs, particularly
puppies already drinking and urinating excessively. Most adult Shih Tzu with
normal kidneys also have a urine specific gravity reading above 1.045. This is
another test of kidney function; it does not tell you that your dog is free of
renal dysplasia. Ultrasound examination of the kidneys may be slightly more
useful in identifying moderately affected dogs, whose kidneys may be smaller
than normal size and show scarring. Only a wide wedge biopsy of the kidney can
currently provide a definitive diagnosis of renal dysplasia and identify
slightly affected dogs by showing the fetal glomeruli that provide definitive
proof of renal dysplasia. (A needle biopsy does not supply enough tissue for
diagnosis and is of no value.)
This disease at the present time presents a real dilemma for breeders. It may
go undetected for many generations or be ignored by knowledgeable breeders
because it is transmitted in a very silent fashion by many animals that appear
clinically normal, and because many breeders are unwilling to subject their dogs
to the surgery that is now the only definitive way to identify the presence of
the disease.
The American Shih Tzu Club is actively involved in a research project to find
a genetic marker for renal dysplasia, which is being done by VetGen in Michigan.
Locating such a genetic marker will mean that we will ultimately be able to
determine whether an animal has any degree of renal dysplasia through a simple
and noninvasive test done on a cheek swab. Even puppies could be tested at a
relatively young age. Once the marker is located, VetGen will be able to perform
the cheek swab test on any Shih Tzu for about $120, with discounts for a large
number of dogs tested at one time. Hopefully, such a test will ultimately
eliminate the disease from our own and other breeds.
At this point, due to the aid of the Lhasa Apso breeders who initiated the
research project, VetGen researchers have narrowed the search to only three
genes and expect to locate such a marker within two years. They are now also
working with Shih Tzu. To locate the specific marker, they are seeking cheek
swab samples from Shih Tzu known to be affected by renal dysplasia through wide
wedge biopsies and dogs that have produced offspring known to be affected
through the results of such biopsies. The dogs do not have to be related, and
their identity will remain strictly confidential. Please, if you own or know of
such a dog or dogs, contact Joann Gustafson of the ASTC Renal Dysplasia
Committee at 1829 F & S Grade Road, Sedro Wooley, WA 98284-9664. She will send
you cheek swabs (you can take the samples yourself) and instructions for sending
the samples to VetGen. Also, ask your veterinarian if he knows of any such dogs
and is willing to contact their owners with this information. The sooner we
collect the needed samples, the sooner the test will be available. If you can,
for the sake of the breed we all love, please do your part to help us eliminate
this disease.
HERE ARE SOME
OF HER OTHER WEBSITES