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by eichenluft on 17 April 2006 - 15:04
by MikeRussell on 17 April 2006 - 15:04
by Blitzen on 17 April 2006 - 16:04
by Louise M. Penery on 17 April 2006 - 17:04
by Preston on 18 April 2006 - 00:04

by steve1 on 04 February 2008 - 17:02
Can anyone tell me how i can obtain a description of the Hip and Elbows chart for the German version of it
As you know diffwerent countries use different symbols like HD etc and ED another conutry uses other symbols i want the German version but cannot find it
Thanks Steve
by Preston on 05 February 2008 - 07:02
If I wanted to use a GSD for breeding I would never trust any "a" stamp rating on a hip Xray taken at 12 months old or shortly after. Good diagnosis of hip status for breeding purposes requires an xray at 2 years old or older IMO. And I want to look at a properly positioned Xray in didgital form, calculate the Norbery angle to be 105 degrees or greater, palpate the GSD's rear muscle mass, get an OFA reading and have an experienced Vet I trust (who has read 100's of GSD hip Xrays for the OFA) give me his own opinion, and have other experienced breeder friends of mine examine the Xrays. If the OFA says the Xray is not a fair, I would probably never use the dog no matter what. If read as a fair, maybe depending on how the Xray looked. And maybe I would resubmit it if I had a question or thought is was actually a good (ie better than the reading).
Like it or not, I believe that Jantie is essentially correct on everything he has stated about HD for the GSD under the SV "a stamp" system. This system IMO is clearly deficient and should require an initial 12 month initial screening Xray and a 24 month final evaluation. In my view a breeding GSD should meet a much higher standard than a GSD which will not be used for breeding. Many GSDs without superb and completely clean hips live out normal lives in the home, Sch competition and the showring with no disabling HD symptoms. This alone should not be used as a criteria for acceptability for breeding. It is now known that HD is approx 90% heritable, and environment only afffects those hips that are shallow (deficient confirmation), faulty ligamentation, poor rear leg muscle mass, abnormal cox2 arthritic inflammatory issues, etc.
If a breeder uses only sire and dams that have clean hips on Xrays at 24 months old or older and any pups with disabling HD are produced, perhaps it is best to find the source, refrain from repeating that breeding or using the suspected line supplying the bad recessives.
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