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The authors assess the
pros and cons of standard diagnostic methods
for hip dysplasia CHROMADANE
This
article is the third in an eight-part series on canine hip dysplasia (CHD).
What follows is written from the perspective that the readers of the
series are conscientious breeders who are the guardians of the genetic
pools that constitute their breeds. While this series of articles will
not replace a stack of veterinary medical texts, it is a relatively
in-depth look at the whole problem of canine hip dysplasia. Furthermore,
the series is designed to be retained as a reference. When you finish
reading it you will have a sufficient background to make rational
breeding choices and will be able to discuss the subject from an
informed basis with your veterinarian. You may not like what you read,
but you will be more competent to deal with the problem.
Conclusions from Part I:
Genetics is the foremost causative factor of canine hip dysplasia.
Without the genes necessary to transmit this degenerative disease, there
is no disease. Hip dysplasia is not something a dog gets; it either is
dysplastic or it is not. An affected animal can exhibit a wide range of
phenotypes, all the way from normal to severely dysplastic and
functionally crippled. Hip dysplasia is genetically inherited.
Conclusions from Part II:
While environmental effects, to include nutrition and exercise, may play
a part in mitigating or delaying the onset of clinical signs and
clinical symptoms, hip dysplasia remains a genetically transmitted
disease. Only by rigorous genetic selection will the incidence rate be
reduced. In the meantime, it makes sense to have lean puppies and to
avoid breeding animals from litters that showed signs of hip dysplasia.
It is probable that even normal exercise levels may increase the
phenotypic expression of CHD of a genetically predisposed dog. Stay away
from calcium supplementation of any kind; all it can do is hurt. There
is no conclusive evidence that vitamin C can prevent hip dysplasia, but
there is some evidence that vitamin C may be useful in reducing pain and
inflammation in the dysplastic dog.
This third article deals with the abnormal hip and how to diagnose it.
Though CHD can afflict all breeds, it is more common in the large and
giant breeds. There is far more to a proper diagnosis than first meets
the eye. Anecdotal evidence has shown that canine hip dysplasia is one
of the most over-diagnosed and misdiagnosed problems afflicting dogs.
Many clinicians may depend too often on only subjective radiographic
interpretation in the diagnosis of CHD. Physical examination techniques
are helpful, and one can often pick up on concurrent conditions that
could be otherwise overlooked. Initially, this article will focus on the
clinical signs of hip dysplasia, the specific methods used by the
experienced practitioner to make the diagnosis and the problems
associated with the classic hips-extended, Orthopedic Foundation for
Animals-approved X-ray positioning for radiographic study. The latter
part of the article will be devoted to important new developments that
hold promise for predicting the probability of phenotypic expression of
CHD.
In the second article in the series, we said that canine hip dysplasia
can be conveniently categorized into two major types. The first is
severe and is seen early in the afflicted dog’s life. The second, and
far more common type, is the insidious chronic form that develops over a
period of time. It is therefore useful to separate dogs by age
classification when describing the clinical signs of hip dysplasia. A
reasonable classification that takes into account maturity, puberty and
attaining adult height, if not near adult weight, would be dogs less
than one year in age and those more than one year in age. This gives
time for atrophy and extraordinary musculature to develop as clinically
recognizable signs. In the young dog, the first symptoms appear to be
decreased activity, sometimes accompanied by joint pain. 1 If a young
dog is found to have a swaying or unsteady gait, or runs with both hind
legs moving together - often referred to by breeders as the "bunny
hop" - it is worth further investigation. Acute episodes of
lameness with both or only one side affected can also occur after
exercise or minor trauma. These signs can also be the result of
infections in joints, lack of synovial fluid or the result of trauma. As
CHD progresses, the dog may also have difficulty rising from a lying or
sitting position and will frequently balk at going up or down stairs.
TYPE OF MOVEMENT RANGE IN DEGREES
Flexion From Neutral to 70 to 80
Extension From Neutral to 80 to 90
Adduction From Neutral to 30 to 40
Abduction From Neutral to 70 to 80
Internal Rotation From Neutral to 50 to 60
Internal to External From Neutral to 80 to 90
Two clinical signs that most often appear together in the older dog are
well-developed muscles in the forelimbs and shoulders due to shifting
weight forward. As the disease progresses, hypertrophy
(over-development) of the front end is accompanied by symmetrical or
non-symmetrical atrophy of the pelvic muscles. Such animals appear weak
in the pelvic region, are reluctant to exercise, generally prefer
sitting to standing and exhibit extreme discomfort when their forelimbs
are lifted off the ground.
RADIOGRAPHIC METHOD SCORES TYPE OF SCORING TYPE OF SCALE
7 Point Scale(OFA) Excellent Good Fair Borderline Mild-HD Severe-HD
Subjective Oridinal
3 Point Scale Normal Borderline Dysplastic Subjective Oridinal
Norberg Angle (NA) Tight hip > 105 degrees Loose Hip <90 degrees
Quantitative Interval
DJD Score DJD Absent NA DJD Present Subjective Oridinal
Distraction Index Index = 0 Tight Hip NA Index = 1 Loose Hip
Quantitative Interval
Remember also that the affected dog may exhibit none of these symptoms.
A substantial number of dogs with radiographic signs of hip dysplasia
show no clinical signs of the disease. Explanations of this phenomenon
are as varied as they are controversial. Quite a few practitioners
believe that a dog radiographically positive for hip dysplasia but
clinically negative for signs is just a dog in an intermediate stage of
the disease progression. This period may last for months, even years,
until the onset of substantial degenerative joint disease. It is not
uncommon for an afflicted (genetically predisposed) dog to die of old
age before any non-radiographic signs develop.
We repeat again the warning issued in the preceding articles: You cannot
tell if a dog is genetically predisposed to hip dysplasia by its
movement. Reject the false wisdom of the old-time breeder who
emphatically states that if his or her dogs had hip dysplasia he or she
would be able to see it. Hip dysplasia is a polygenic, multifactorial
disease.
Before a definitive diagnosis of CHD can be made, other problems must be
ruled out. 3 Thorough medical, orthopedic and neurological examinations
must be made in order to rule out other disorders of the hip and spine.
Multiple joint involvement may be the case. The following is a condensed
list of some of the more common conditions that mimic or may be
concurrent with canine hip dysplasia:
Physical disorders of the stifle-ruptured or torn cranial cruciate
ligaments; luxating patellae; meniscus tears in the knee. Diseases of
the joints-rheumatoid arthritis; metabolic bone disease; polyarthritis
from Lyme and other infectious disease; panosteitis (bone inflammation).
Nutritional bone disease-chronic subclinical scurvy. Spinal disorders:
ruptured vertebral disease; degenerative spinal disease; lumbosacral
instability. Neurological conditions-trauma: poisoning (lead,
etc.);infections; neural lesions; proprioception (posture sense).
An example of another condition masquerading as hip dysplasia is the
all-too-common spinal degenerative myelopathy in German Shepherd Dogs.
After reading the preceding list, you should realize that CHD is not an
easy condition to diagnose with great surety unless a full examination
is conducted. If you do not find radiographic signs, that still does not
preclude some of the problems mentioned above.
Dr. William Inman a clinician in Washington state feels that canine hip
dysplasia is the most over-diagnosed and misdiagnosed condition in the
veterinary medical practice. While he feels that hip dysplasia is
genetically predisposed, he remains puzzled by finding in his practice
clinically dysplastic dogs with radiographically normal hips and
symptom-free dogs with coxofemoral joints that look "like a bomb
went off in them." Inman states, "Curiously, in all the young
dogs we see with hip dysplasia signs in the 5 to 18-month range, we
always find a subluxation at T8-T10 [dislocation of the Thoracic
vertebra through Thoracic vertebra 10]." This is a potentially
important finding because the T8 to T10 area "innervates the
peraspinal muscles and the iliopsas muscle, which attaches to the
femoral head and pulls it forward. Subluxation leads to muscle spasming,
which causes continued anterior traction of the femur on the hip socket,
flattening the Joint…reduction of this subluxation reverses the
progression of hip dysplasia by curing the musculo-skeletal
dysfunction." Inman has relieved the symptoms of more than 3,500
dogs with his procedure.
The conclusion that Inman has drawn from his practice is that the T8-T10
subluxation is a physical condition that, unless dealt with immediately,
will progress to the joint capsular fibrosis and muscle stricture
associated with decreased range of motion. The subsequent skeletal
changes that follow can only be addressed surgically. He recommends
early intervention in dogs thus afflicted to halt this insidious
process.
Inman’s theory appears radical, but it is not contrary to the concepts
previously presented. He does not maintain that a genetic disease is not
associated with hip dysplasia, only that a misdiagnosed physical
condition mimics the disease process. Thus, the incidence of CHD may be
lower than previously thought by other researchers.
Given that many other processes may be at play, the following are some
of the physical techniques used in the diagnosis of CHD. While a
tentative diagnosis can be made on the basis of history, clinical signs
and the various palpation methods, standard veterinary practice requires
radiographic signs of CHD. Diagnostic methods fall into two general
categories: subjective and quantitative. We have found no method,
subjective or quantitative, that is without its detractors or without
serious controversy.
SUBJECTIVE METHODS OF DIAGNOSIS
Observation.
The first step in the diagnosis of a suspected case of CHD is orthopedic
examination, which should include observation of the dog at rest,
walking, running and a re-examination of the dog the day following
vigorous exercise.5, 6 Observation and neurologic examination should be
conducted before administering any drugs, and especially before sedation
or general anesthesia, which can significantly alter the dog’s
neurologic status.
Range of motion.
In an anesthetized dog, the coxofemoral joint’s range of motion is
approximately 110 degrees. With pathology, this range of motion can be
reduced to as little as 45 degrees. When following a chronic patient,
the clinician uses changes in the range of motion to quantify the
progress of the disease and as an aide when determining treatment
options. Figure 1 is a table of the clinical categories by range of
motion.
Changes in gait patterns.
A shortened length of stride is associated with a loss in range of
motion. There is a considerable variance among animals, but as a general
rule, shortened stride length does not appear until fully extended
movement is painful for the dog. This is the case with severe
degenerative joint disease. Similarly, this type of gait abnormality can
occur if the joint capsule has become fibrous. The many shapes and sizes
of dogs make it impossible to describe all the potential gait changes.
However, the bunny hop, left to right shift of the pelvis or an
elliptical swing of the leg and hip are common gait problems
encountered.
Forced extension.
Affected dogs will not only exhibit discomfort with forced extension of
the hip, but will try to return the limb to a more relaxed position.
Depending on the temperament of these animals, they may also vocalize or
exhibit aggressive behavior in response to pain. Be aware that the
fighting dogs and the Northern breeds tend to have high pain tolerance
levels and are generally stoic with respect to pain. Downward pressure
on the rear limb. When force is applied to the hips of a standing
animal, the affected animal will show little or no resistance to the
pressure, and will assume a sitting position. Several factors may
simultaneously be involved and interrelated, such as pain, muscle
weakness or atrophy.
Palpation.
In humans, the most popular and reliable palpation maneuver used to
identify congenital dislocation of the hip determines the presence or
absence of the Ortolani sign. "A positive Ortolani sign confirms
the diagnosis of coxofemoral subluxation in newborns prior to
development of clinical signs or radiographic changes." Many
veterinarians feel that the techniques have too much subjectivity and
variance to be of much use. Nonetheless, the Ortolani sign still figures
prominently in the literature. Animals to be examined must be
anesthetized past the point where there is still a palpable response.
Two basic approaches are used: dorsal recumbency and lateral recumbency,
with dorsal recumbency being preferred for large dogs. Downward pressure
is applied down the axis of the femur until the femoral head subluxates.
The leg is slowly abducted while holding the stifle firmly. If the joint
is loose, a distinct clicking may be felt and in some cases will be
audible.
Other palpation methods have been proposed by Barlow and Bardens.
Barlow’s Sign is essentially the first half of the Ortolani Test.
Downward axial pressure is applied on the femur without abducting the
leg. The Bardens’ Test places the dog on its side, and the leg is held
perpendicular to the spine. Lifting pressure is applied to the femoral
shaft without abduction. The examiner’s finger is placed on the
greater trochanter. Any movement of the finger by more than one-fourth
inch is considered a positive sign for a loose joint. Palpation has
shown diagnostic use in human neonates, but is controversial and may
have little diagnostic or prognostic utility in the dog. A caution: In
human infants, it has been suggested that repetitive Barlow tests, and
presumably Ortolani and Bardens as well, are capable of making infant
hips unstable, thus giving a false-positive result.
The Neurologic exam.
During a normal physical examination, the clinician will observe both
the posture and movement of the dog. Of the two observations (gait and
posture), how the animal stands or its ability to return to a normal
stance tells more about the neurological status. Some breeds have been
selectively bred for a characteristic gait. Thus gaits may vary
tremendously among breeds. A Borzoi moving as a Bulldog would be one
sick Borzoi. A poor postural response may indicate a proprioceptive
deficit.
Proprioception, or posture sense, is the ability to recognize the
location of limbs in relation to the rest of the body without visual
clues. An abnormally wide stance is one indication of a possible
problem. The simplest method of evaluation is to bend the paw so the
back of the foot is bearing the dog’s weight. The normal response is
to immediately reposition the paw correctly. A problem in proprioception
positioning is often an early indication of neurological problems, and
most often precedes motor dysfunction (gait anomalies).
When evaluating the dog specifically for hip dysplasia, one needs to
rule out deficits in the spinal-reflex arc. An example of the
spinal-reflex arc where the neural response is not transmitted to the
brain but returned (arcs back) is the familiar tap on the knee with a
rubber hammer. (The neural response travels from the muscle to the spine
and returns to the muscle, without traveling to the brain.) The absence
of an involuntary response or an exaggerated response are indications of
neurologic problems. Some variance among breeds is noted, as large dog
responses tend to be less rapid than those in smaller breeds.
Routinely, the "knee jerk" (quadricep reflex) is tested first
with the normal reaction being a single quick extension of the stifle.
Next, the flexor reflex is evaluated by gently pinching the toes. The
normal dog should pull the entire limb (hip, stifle and hock) up toward
the belly. Although not strictly analogous, the extension toe reflex has
been compared to the Babinski reflex in humans. The examiner will hold
the hock and gently stroke the back surface from the hock down toward
the pad. The normal animal will either exhibit no response or a slight
flexion of the toes. The abnormal reaction is the extension and
spreading of the toes. These tests, by no means comprehensive or
exhaustive, constitute the minimal examination to rule out spinal
problems in a dog being evaluated for hip dysplasia.
SUBJECTIVE DIAGNOSTIC RADIOGRAPHIC METHODS
Hip-extended radiographic method.
This traditional X-ray position has been the standard position, which
has the dog sedated, on its back, with legs fully extended and patella
facing upward, became the standard of the American Veterinary Medical
Association Panel on Hip Dysplasia in 1961, and was adopted by the
Orthopedic Foundation for Animals in 1966. University of Pennsylvania
studies have been conducted that show interpretations are not highly
consistent among radiologists, and are not highly consistent when the
same radiologist reads the same deck of X-rays in shuffled order. OFA
scores (excellent, good, fair, borderline, mild, moderate and severe)
have wide acceptance but as subjective interpretations not readily
repeatable with the same animal , nor likely to be interpreted
consistently by different radiologists. At first it appeared that the
seven-point scale was more discrete than diagnostic protocol warranted.
When the seven-point scale was collapsed to a three-point scale (normal,
borderline, dysplastic) agreement improved. The hips-extended
positioning has come under criticism because it masks joint laxity. This
positioning masks joint laxity in two ways both involving the joint
capsule. With the hip extended, the fibers of the joint capsule tighten
in such a way as to push the femoral head into the acetabulum. This
position also leads to a lowering of the intra-articular pressure, which
combined with the fixed synovial fluid volume causes invagination of the
joint capsule. These two conditions limit the amount of sideways
movement of the femoral head. Similarly, unsedated positioning may
further mask joint laxity.
Norberg Angle method.
The Norberg Angle radiographic method of determining joint laxity (subluxation)
has been used more in Europe than in the United States. The standard OFA
hip-extended radiographic projection is used (see figure 3). Norberg
angles typically range from 55 degrees to 115 degrees, with the smaller
numbers representing looser hips. Unfortunately, there is no common
agreement as to what constitutes a normal angle, though 105 degrees may
be used as a point estimate for normal joint laxity. Correlation with
OFA interpretations is poor, which is one reason the Norberg Angle
method is not well accepted as a diagnostic tool and is considered
subjective at this time.
QUANTITATIVE DIAGNOSTIC RADIOGRAPHIC METHOD
Compression/Distraction method.
This new stress radiographic method originated at the University of
Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine and is currently marketed by
PennHIP®. What started as a look at the role of passive hip laxity in
CHD has become a quantitative diagnostic protocol referenced to an
extensive data base. In recent years joint laxity has been established
in the literature as prognostic for degenerative joint disease.
Initially, however little statistical evidence supported this
contention. Now that a major data base has been developed for purposes
of comparison and for determining probabilities, joint laxity can be
used as an indirect variable with which to predict the probability of
eventual phenotypic expression of CHD.
Unfortunately for breeders, deep sedation is required in the
compression/distraction method. The traditional OFA positioning was
found inadequate. In the stress radiographic method, the dog is laid on
its back with its hips at a neutral flexion/extension angle. A
compression view is taken with the femoral heads seated tightly in the
acetabula congruency between the two joint surfaces. A second, or
distraction, view is taken showing the maximum separation distance of
the femoral head center from the acetabular center A special device is
used to force the femoral head away from the acetabulum for the
distraction view. This protocol has been shown at University of
Pennsylvania to reveal 2.5 times more joint laxity than the standard
hip-extended radiograph.
The power of this method lies both in the new positions and in the
statistical significance of the compression index (CI) and the
distraction index (DI) as supported by a data base. The indices range
from 0 to 1, with "0 being a fully congruent hip (as seen in the
compression radiographic view) and 1 representing the most extreme joint
laxity as might be seen in the distraction view of hips that are
virtually luxated." The OFA scoring method is an ordinal scale, the
Norberg Angle method is an interval scale and the DI is a ration scale.
Thus the DI is intuitive in its meaning: A hip with a DI of 0.5 has
twice the laxity of a hip with a DI of 0.25. Similarly a DI of 0.5 can
be thought of as a hip 50 percent luxated. The DI ratio scale is far
more useful a rating than the Norberg Angle. See figure 2 for a
comparison of scales.
Breeders are always looking for earlier detection of CHD, the earlier
the better for determining which animals to keep and classify as show
and breeding hopefuls. Compression and distraction evaluations have been
done on a sample of 8-week-old German Shepherd Dog puppies without the
results being conclusive. At 16 weeks, this method becomes useful. Dr.
Gale Smith, et. al., at the University of Pennsylvania Hip Improvement
Program (PennHIP) recommended that dogs not be evaluated before 16 weeks
and that follow-up radiography should be done at 6months or 1 year of
age. In later articles in this series we will address the utility of the
PennHIP protocol for prognosis.
Genetic (blood-based) diagnostic test.
At this time, no biomechanical or metabolic differences have been
identified in the dysplastic dog. Extensive work continues for an early
blood marker for the condition. Finding such a marker would be ideal, as
it would both allow the breeder to definitively screen breeding stock,
and help the clinician identify appropriate treatment protocols.
Parallel work is being done in determining genetic factors in humans for
rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. Restriction Fragment Length
Polymorphism (RFLP) linkage analysis has been used to identify genes
associated with those diseases. Since there appears to be a strong
genetic base for CHD, restriction fragments in the white blood cell DNA
should correspond to the dysplastic phenotype.
Conclusions:
Canine Hip Dysplasia can be difficult to diagnose. Other orthopedic,
neurological, autoimmune/infection and metabolic problems may mimic CHD
or may be concurrent with CHD. Numerous palpation techniques (Ortolani,
Bardens, Barlow) have been proposed; however, they remain subjective
nonquantitative methods that rely heavily on the skill of the clinician.
The standard in current veterinary practice is to confirm CHD
radiographically. The traditional American Veterinary Medical
Association and Orthopedic Foundation for Animals hip-extended
radiographic view distorts the amount of joint laxity present by forcing
the femoral head deeper into the acetabular cup, thus understating the
amount of laxity present. University of Pennsylvania (PennHIP) protocols
for stress radiography are coming to the forefront as a more definitive
way of visualizing hip joint laxity. Canine hip dysplasia remains a
polygenic, multifactorial disease.
The next article in this series will discuss the various hip dysplasia
registries, their approaches to the problems of canine hip dysplasia and
the importance of having a "tamper-proof" identification
system.
RADIOGRAPHIC METHOD SCORES TYPE OF SCORING TYPE OF SCALE
7 Point Scale(OFA) Excellent Good Fair Borderline Mild-HD Severe-HD
Subjective Oridinal
3 Point Scale Normal Borderline Dysplastic Subjective Oridinal
Norberg Angle (NA) Tight hip > 105 degrees Loose Hip < 90 degrees
Quantitative Interval
DJD Score DJD Absent NA DJD Present Subjective Oridinal
Distraction Index Index = 0 Tight Hip NA Index = 1 Loose Hip
Quantitative Interval |