Runty or Dwarf? - Page 1

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melba

by melba on 26 April 2017 - 23:04

An imageAn imageI have this little girl in my litter, was average size at birth but the others are much larger. Average at 6 weeks was around 8 lbs. She's mayyybe 4. Any thoughts? Thank you!

Melissa An image


melba

by melba on 26 April 2017 - 23:04

I'll add that she's not the only fuzzy. Dam carries for LSC.

Koots

by Koots on 27 April 2017 - 00:04

Can you put up some pics of littermates to compare structure?

Mithuna

by Mithuna on 27 April 2017 - 00:04

Koots

Being a runt should not be much of a concern. I was told by my dog's breeder that she was the runt of the litter.Gu ess what...she grew up to be a 90 lb dog ( same weight range as her siblings ), and she is bigger than most GSDs I see around here..even the males.
From the get go she was placed on a very high quality diet.

melba

by melba on 27 April 2017 - 01:04

An image


melba

by melba on 27 April 2017 - 01:04

No, being a runt isn't the concern. The concern is that if she IS a dwarf, finding the right home for her where any potential medical is planned for.

Reliya

by Reliya on 27 April 2017 - 11:04

Melba, I'm sending you an unrelated PM instead of posting here.

by joanro on 27 April 2017 - 11:04

If it was one of mine, I'd keep her rather than put potential heartbreak on others. If I produce it, I own it...good and not good..
I had a podium stud that produced a couple disastrous litters out of unrelated bitches. From a teeny tiny to giant 13 in long neonate in a litter of eight. I kept the teentsy girl til she no longer was thriving at 14 weeks and my vet said it was time. Only fair to keep them, not pass on potential heartache.

melba

by melba on 27 April 2017 - 12:04

Do we feel then that she may be a dwarf?
I was told that in this females and males prior litter that there was a pup identical to this little girl who is now 70lbs.
I'm going to have a complete medical workup before I decide anything.

Melissa

by joanro on 27 April 2017 - 12:04

Dwafism is not the only thing that will cause a tiny pup. Could be any of a number of medical problems...heart defect, megaesophagus, kidney malformation, etc. At this stage, some annomolies can be diagnosed, but depends on how good your vet is. Best regards.






 


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