โAug-12-2013 05:26 AM
We deal with genetic disease every day in our practice in
pure-bred, cross-bred and mixed-breed dogs. There is
a general misconception that mixed-breed dogs are
inherently free of genetic disease. This may be true for
the rare breed-related disorders, but the common genetic
diseases that are seen across all breeds are seen with the
same frequency in mixed-breed dogs.
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Breed-specific genetic diseases tend not to spill out into
the mixed-breed populations. Exceptions to this, however,
are ancient mutations that occurred before the separation
of breeds. These disease-causing genes mutated
so long ago that the mutation (and its
associated disease) is found in
evolutionary divergent breeds.
************************************************************
The most common hereditary diseases occur across all
pure-bred, mixed breed and designer-bred dogs. These
include cancer, eye disease, epilepsy, hip dysplasia,
hypothyroidism, heart disease, autoimmune disease,
allergies, patellar luxation and elbow dysplasia.
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The production of designer breeds โ planned crosses
between two breeds to produce offspring โ has become
a growing trend in commercial dog breeding. Puggles,
Yorkipoos, Cavishons and Labradoodles, to name a few, are
all coming into our clinics. Owners believe that these pets
will be genetically healthy because they are cross-bred. As
we treat these patients, we know that this is not the case.
Source: The Clinical Truths about Prue Breeds, Mixed Breeds, and Designer Breeds
Jerold Bell, DVM
โAug-14-2013 10:05 PM
dturm wrote:CA POPPY wrote:
If I was "placing" Daisy I would call her a Beagle/Lab cross. At least I'd know she'd be adopted. :B
:B We never see Pit crosses coming from rescues around this area. Go figure...
โAug-14-2013 02:21 PM
CA POPPY wrote:
If I was "placing" Daisy I would call her a Beagle/Lab cross. At least I'd know she'd be adopted. :B
โAug-14-2013 01:49 PM
โAug-14-2013 01:15 PM
โAug-14-2013 12:26 PM
โAug-14-2013 12:17 PM
โAug-14-2013 10:17 AM
โAug-14-2013 09:48 AM
โAug-14-2013 04:59 AM
Deb and Ed M wrote:
You are right about some backyard breeders just wanting to make a buck, but the same can be said about some rescues and shelters. I've seen firsthand how someone can adopt a pup from a shelter and end up with a dog who's anything but what was described. One of my daughters adopted a "poodle and daschund cross - should mature around 20 lbs" and got a 60 lb Aussie and GSD mix....LOL!!! At least my "designer mutt" won't give me any surprises.
dturm wrote:
I often laugh at the breed people assign to puppies. It is very difficult to tell what mixes are included in a puppy under 3-4 months of age. So much easier to see when you monitor body changes as they mature, but it's still a best guess.
Doug, DVM
โAug-14-2013 04:56 AM
dturm wrote:I see both extremes in terms of genetic testing; no use of tests and running every available test. Those tests that are relevant for a breed should be run; there is no need to test for a disease where the incident rate in the breed is below 1% (as long as there is no evidence of it in the lines being crossed). Not testing for diseases that are prevalent in the breed is a disservice to the pups, the buyers of the pups, and the entire breed (producing affected pups and adding carriers to the gene pool).
This is where the genetic markers and testing can really benefit because we can get a handle before breeding. But, to be effective breeders have to go through the testing and then breed according to results.
Doug, DVM
โAug-14-2013 03:36 AM
โAug-13-2013 08:09 PM
Deb and Ed M wrote:Sue Bee wrote:
Off topic, somewhat, but it irks me to no end that people go out and spend big money on "designer breed" dogs thinking that they are getting some sort of hybrid vigor, when many of the "breeders" of these dogs are starting with poor breeding stock, since many of these breeders, not all, but a good many of them, are just BYBs with no knowledge of good genetics, and are in it only to make a buck.
A person would be better off either getting a mutt from the city pound, or researching actual accepted pure breeds of dogs and finding a reputable breeder who knows what they are doing.
You are right about some backyard breeders just wanting to make a buck, but the same can be said about some rescues and shelters. I've seen firsthand how someone can adopt a pup from a shelter and end up with a dog who's anything but what was described. One of my daughters adopted a "poodle and daschund cross - should mature around 20 lbs" and got a 60 lb Aussie and GSD mix....LOL!!! At least my "designer mutt" won't give me any surprises.
โAug-13-2013 05:56 PM
โAug-13-2013 05:45 PM
Sue Bee wrote:
Off topic, somewhat, but it irks me to no end that people go out and spend big money on "designer breed" dogs thinking that they are getting some sort of hybrid vigor, when many of the "breeders" of these dogs are starting with poor breeding stock, since many of these breeders, not all, but a good many of them, are just BYBs with no knowledge of good genetics, and are in it only to make a buck.
A person would be better off either getting a mutt from the city pound, or researching actual accepted pure breeds of dogs and finding a reputable breeder who knows what they are doing.