OFA Fair Hip rating - Page 1

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by HighDesertGSD on 08 May 2008 - 18:05

What is OFA "Fair" for hips?

According to OFFA, "Fair" is comparable to "Normal", not "Fast Normal"  in SA a stamp. "Fair" is the lowest among normal hip.

For the purpose of breeding, the OFFA specifically suggests to not regard "Fair" as unsuitable for breeding. It says that it is better to breed a dog with Fair hips itself but with an established normal (E, G or F) hips ancestory than one of  Good or Excellent hips but of unestablished ancestory, with missing OFA records of parents and grandparents.

Do you agree with OFFA?

I have seen two Excellents from two Fair parent pairs. It seems to me that the significance among the three normal categories in OFA hip ratings  is not  great.

 

 


by Blitzen on 08 May 2008 - 18:05

I do agree and many times a better xray will get your dog a better rating.


by beepy on 08 May 2008 - 18:05


OFA

CI (European)

BVA (UK/Australia)

SV (Germany)

E

A-1

0-4 (no > 3/hip)

Normal

G

A-2

5

by sjm on 08 May 2008 - 18:05

Keep in mind the 2 leading causing of HD are 1. Genetics & 2. Nutrition/Diet.....so let's say that a Sire/ Dam OFA fair because they did not get the required amount of nutrients during the key phases of bone development, but their offspring did and they OFA excellent...then nutrition is to blame...

I too have seen "fair" sire/dam's, and their offspring OFA "good" or "excellent", but when it comes to breeding I personally would not breed fair-to-fair...if it is genetics then why not increase your odds of better hips...do I agree with differences in ratings?  yes and no..sometimes it's hard to tell if the femur head is deformed, or if the hip socket is too shallow, I wouldn't sweat a "fair" rating, there's a fine line between good and bad hips.  You ask 100 different dog trainers what is the right way to train a dog, I guarantee you will get 100 different answers


by beepy on 08 May 2008 - 19:05

I dont know what went wrong with my earlier posting!

It should have shown:

OFA                         CI (European)           BVA (UK/Australia)   SV (Germany)

E                               A-1                             0-4 (no > 3/hip)            Normal

G                               A-2                             5-10 (no > 6/hip)          Normal

F                               B-1                             11-18                           Normal

B                               B-2                             19-25                           Fast Normal


by Preston on 09 May 2008 - 07:05

I disagree.  The a stamp is typically less diagnostic because it is taken at one year.  The OFA requires the dog to be at least 2 years old which is an age where better dignoses can be made. 

What this means is that the range of variance in the SV xray reading is much greater long term than for the OFA reading.  For example a SV a stamp of  "A normal" can end up with a range all the way from OFA excellent to mild dysplasia at 5 years old.  My vet who is now retired xrayed many german "a stamps" for OFA from folks who imported them and wanted to see how the hips and elbows looked at two or over and found a very great variance in these "a stamps".  He showed me some examples which were surprising to me, "a normals" which xrayed to appear mildly displastic, and some appearing to be OFA fair, good or excellent. This vet's positioning was the best , that's why I drove so far to use him--he did of lot of GSDs for many years, of import and domestic breeding (he used two helpers and the owner and used a remote footpedal to activate the xray machine while he did the main positioning.  To me an "a stamp" should be repeated at two years old if one is going to use the dog at public stud.   This increases the diagnostic value substantially.  At least 25% of the imported GSDs he xrayed the elbows on had DJD, a surprising frequency. 

 


by Held on 09 May 2008 - 16:05

blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh


Ryanhaus

by Ryanhaus on 09 May 2008 - 17:05

What held said..............


Bob-O

by Bob-O on 10 May 2008 - 00:05

O.F.A. "Fair" is a passing score, and the dog is breedable if most of its siblings and ancestors are passing dogs as well. Sometimes a "Fair" can improve to a "Good" if the positioning is better, but usually it is what it is. The score of "Fair" is interpreted by the O.F.A. to be "suspicious of hip dysplasie" meaning that it could worsen to the end that it develops degenerative joint disease, essentially arthritis.

What is it's S.V. equivilent? That depends on who you ask and their experience with the two (2) systems. In my opinion, it lies somewhere between "a"1 and "a"2. I will take Preston's statements further and say that I will trust an O.F.A. "Fair" at the age of twenty-four (24) months much more that I will trust an S.V. "a"1 or "a"2 at twelve months because of the difference in bone and joint maturity.

And yes, I agree with the O.F.A. as far as the value of siblings and ancestors rather than just the examined dog. That is the way the S.V.'s ZW system works, but of course the S.V. uses a formula to calculate the predictability of hip quality and assigns a numerical value.

Best Regards,

Bob-O

 


Ryanhaus

by Ryanhaus on 10 May 2008 - 00:05

What Bob-O said also............

It's not the individual, it's the family as a whole, (History)...............






 


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