Evaluation of a circumferential femoral head osteophyte as an early indicator of osteoarthritis characteristic of canine hip dysplasia in dogs.

OBJECTIVE To determine the relationship between a circumferential femoral head osteophyte (CFHO) and osteoarthritis characteristic of canine hip dysplasia, and to ascertain whether CFHO, like osteoarthritis, varies between diet-restricted and control-fed dogs. DESIGN Longitudinal cohort study. ANIMALS 48 Labrador Retrievers. PROCEDURES Dogs were paired by size, sex, and litter and assigned to 1 of 2 equal groups at 2 months of age. The control-fed group was fed ad libitum, and the diet-restricted group was fed 25% less on a pairwise basis of the same diet for life. The dogs' hip joints were radiographed yearly for life. Each radiograph was evaluated for radiographic signs of osteoarthritis characteristic of hip dysplasia and for the presence and severity of a CFHO. RESULTS 41 of the 48 (85.4%) dogs had a CFHO, which was detected at a median age of 5.4 years, and 33 of those 41 (80.5%) developed radiographic evidence of osteoarthritis. Nineteen (79.2%) dogs in the diet-restricted group and 22 (91.7%) in the control-fed group had a CFHO at a median age of 9 and 3 years, respectively. Of the dogs with a CFHO, 12 (63.2%) in the diet-restricted group and 20 (90.0%) in the control-fed group developed radiographic evidence of osteoarthritis characteristic of hip dysplasia at a median age of 11 and 6.5 years, respectively. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE Results indicated a relationship between the CFHO and subsequent development of radiographic signs of osteoarthritis. If a CFHO is present in Labrador Retrievers, it might be considered an early indicator of osteoarthritis.

[1]  Madsen Js The joint capsule and joint laxity in dogs with hip dysplasia. , 1997 .

[2]  D. Lawler,et al.  Effects of limited food consumption on the incidence of hip dysplasia in growing dogs. , 1992, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.

[3]  Gail K. Smith,et al.  Coxofemoral joint laxity from distraction radiography and its contemporaneous and prospective correlation with laxity, subjective score, and evidence of degenerative joint disease from conventional hip-extended radiography in dogs. , 1993, American journal of veterinary research.

[4]  D. Slatter Textbook of small animal surgery , 1985 .

[5]  Riser Wh The dog as a model for the study of hip dysplasia. Growth, form, and development of the normal and dysplastic hip joint. , 1975 .

[6]  D. Lawler,et al.  Five-year longitudinal study on limited food consumption and development of osteoarthritis in coxofemoral joints of dogs. , 1997, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.

[7]  D. Lawler,et al.  Lifelong diet restriction and radiographic evidence of osteoarthritis of the hip joint in dogs. , 2006, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.

[8]  P. Mayhew,et al.  Use of the caudolateral curvilinear osteophyte as an early marker for future development of osteoarthritis associated with hip dysplasia in dogs. , 2004, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.

[9]  D. Lawler,et al.  Evaluation of the effect of limited food consumption on radiographic evidence of osteoarthritis in dogs. , 2000, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.

[10]  J. Morgan CANINE HIP DYSPLASIA , 1987 .

[11]  A. Kapatkin,et al.  Canine hip dysplasia: The disease and its diagnosis , 2002 .

[12]  P. Mayhew,et al.  Evaluation of a radiographic caudolateral curvilinear osteophyte on the femoral neck and its relationship to degenerative joint disease and distraction index in dogs. , 2002, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.