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Hip Dysplasia is a terrible genetic disease
because of the various degrees of arthritis (also
called degenerative joint disease, arthrosis,
osteoarthrosis) it can eventually produce, leading
to pain and debilitation.
The very first step in the development of
arthritis is articular cartilage (the type of
cartilage lining the joint) damage due to the
inherited bad biomechanics of an abnormally
developed hip joint. Traumatic articular fracture
through the joint surface is another way cartilage
is damaged. With cartilage damage, lots of
degradative enzymes are released into the joint.
These enzymes degrade and decrease the synthesis of
important constituent molecules that form hyaline
cartilage called proteoglycans. This causes the
cartilage to lose its thickness and elasticity,
which are important in absorbing mechanical loads
placed across the joint during movement. Eventually,
more debris and enzymes spill into the joint fluid
and destroy molecules called glycosaminoglycan and
hyaluronate which are important precursors that form
the cartilage proteoglycans.
The joint's lubrication
and ability to block inflammatory cells are lost and
the debris-tainted joint fluid loses its ability to
properly nourish the cartilage through impairment of
nutrient-waste exchange across the joint cartilage
cells. The damage then spreads to the synovial
membrane lining the joint capsule and more degradative enzymes and inflammatory cells stream
into the joint. Full thickness loss of cartilage
allows the synovial fluid to contact nerve endings
in the subchondral bone, resulting in pain. In an
attempt to stabilize the joint to decrease the pain,
the animal's body produces new bone at the edges of
the joint surface, joint capsule, ligament and
muscle attachments (bone spurs). The joint capsule
also eventually thickens and the joint's range of
motion decreases.
No one can predict when or even if a dysplastic
dog will start showing clinical signs of lameness
due to pain. There are multiple environmental
factors such as caloric intake, level of exercise,
and weather that can affect the severity of clinical
signs and phenotypic expression (radiographic
changes). There is no rhyme or reason to the
severity of radiographic changes correlated with the
clinical findings. There are a number of dysplastic
dogs with severe arthritis that run, jump, and play
as if nothing is wrong and some dogs with barely any
arthritic radiographic changes that are severely
lame.
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