Growth and Development I - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 22
About This Presentation
Title:

Growth and Development I

Description:

Mental dullness or seizures after eating. Liver shunts ... Often mentally dull ... head, wide spaced eyes, mentally dull. Hydrocephalus. Think Chihuahua ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:87
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: matthewe5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Growth and Development I


1
Growth and DevelopmentI
  • AnS 224
  • Spring 2009

2
Pups and Kittens at Birth
  • Eyes and ears closed
  • Begin to open about 10-17 days
  • Unable to urinate or defecate on their own
  • Require maternal cleaning/stimulation
  • Must be done by foster parent
  • Unable to maintain body temperature
  • Require adequate environmental support
  • Localize to pups
  • The pyramid versus twos and threes versus solo

3
Early Newborn Period Mistaken folk wisdom
  • Every litter has a runt (not necessarily true)
  • Runting can be associated with some genetic
    diseases and these pups will be poor doers
  • Runting is more likely to be a chance occurrence
  • Where in the uterus did that pups placenta
    implant
  • These pups should gain weight well, especially
    after the introduction of solid food
  • Bitches sometimes accidentally smoother pups
  • Look to something wrong with the pup or the dam
    or the housing and management of the litter

4
Genetic DiseasesPuppy Growth and Development
  • Early Newborn Period
  • 1-3 days after birth
  • Late Newborn Period
  • Up to 2 weeks after birth
  • Nursing Period
  • Up to 3-4 weeks after birth
  • Weanling Period
  • 8 weeks after birth

5
Early Newborn PeriodBirth deformity versus
metabolic disease
  • Birth deformity
  • Cleft palate or cleft lip
  • Anus is not open, segmental atresia
  • Walrus puppies
  • Metabolic disease
  • Fading puppies/dead puppies
  • Acceptable losses are not necessarily natural
  • May be difficult to distinguish true fading pups
    from management issues

6
Congenital Malformations and Related Disorders
  • Literally a defect present at birth
  • Versus inherited disease
  • Things that you can readily see at birth
  • Can be recessive diseases
  • Can be complex inheritance
  • Not simple recessive/dominant
  • Can also be spontaneous occurrence (new mutation
    not seen in parent)
  • Some defects though present only show up
    clinically later

7
Walrus Pups
  • Anasarca
  • Swelling of fetus with fluid
  • Seen in various breeds and lines of dogs
  • Multiple genetic causes
  • Can cause life threatening dystocia

8
Umbilical Hernia
  • Cause unknown
  • Genetics and environment
  • If isolated, easily repaired
  • No real impact on life and health
  • More common in dogs than cats
  • Use in breeding program?

9
Ectodermal Dysplasia
  • X-Linked Disease
  • Spontaneous mutation in a male German Shepherd
  • No hair over rump, head and chest
  • Abnormal teeth and toe nails
  • Evident at birth

10
Coat Color Dilution
  • Rhodesian Ridgeback color dilution syndrome
  • Autosomal recessive, with lighter hair and iris
    than normal, and fatal brain disease
  • Grey Collie Syndrome
  • Autosomal recessive, lighter than normal hair,
    and fatal immune system defect

11
Black Hair Follicular Dysplasia
  • Pups have gray instead of black hair
  • Hair begins to break and fall out at 2 weeks of
    age
  • Affected dogs have normal white hair
  • Affected adults are bald in black haired areas
  • Autosomal recessive
  • Normal parents with 25 affected pups
  • Many breeds described

12
Special Cases
  • Merle
  • One mutant allele
  • Merle
  • Two mutant alleles
  • Defective White
  • Deaf
  • Eye problems
  • Flashing in Boxers
  • One mutant allele
  • Flashed
  • White nose, chest, and legs
  • Two mutant alleles
  • Defective White

13
Late Newborn and Nursing Period
  • Puppies should be stable and gaining 50 of body
    weight/week
  • Possible problems if management adequate
  • Herpes virus
  • Can lose entire litters
  • Will only happen once in a bitchs lifetime
  • Navel ill
  • Fading puppies and failure to thrive
  • Metabolic disease

14
Canine Herpes Virus
  • Rare but serious clinical problem
  • Understudied
  • Virus prefers to replicate at lower than body
    temperature
  • Cause of fatal infection in pups
  • Can lose entire litter within days
  • One time occurrence in the repro life of a bitch
  • Caused by first time infection in perinatal period

15
Immunodeficiency
  • X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency
  • (Bubble boy disease)
  • Bassets
  • Welsh Pembroke Corgis
  • Normal females
  • Produce only affected males
  • Fading pups
  • Failure to thrive
  • 50 of normal weight
  • Opportunistic infections and skin diseases
  • Other forms may be possible, both X-linked and
    autosomal recessive

16
Weanling Period
  • Problems associated with feeding
  • Mental dullness or seizures after eating
  • Liver shunts
  • Metabolic disease
  • Regurgitation (throwing up food without the
    stomach contractions of vomiting)
  • Megaesophagus
  • Neurological disease

17
Liver Shunts
  • Blood bypasses liver
  • Toxins not inactivated
  • Low blood protein
  • Low blood sugar
  • Seen in cats and dogs
  • Often mentally dull after feeding

http//www.acvs.org/AnimalOwners/HealthConditions/
SmallAnimalTopics/PortosystemicShunts(PSS
18
Persistent Right Aortic Arch
  • Abnormal vessels cause a ring around esophagus
  • Seen in dogs when changing from liquid to hard
    food
  • Difficult to manage
  • Can be life threatening
  • German shepherd dogs

http//cal.vet.upenn.edu/projects/cardiosf/project
/praapres/praprs3.htm
19
Weanling Period
  • Problems associated with urination
  • Constant dribblers
  • Blood in urine
  • Difficult or painful urination
  • Birth defects of the urinary tract
  • Hydrocephalus
  • Dome shaped head, wide spaced eyes, mentally dull

20
Hydrocephalus
Think Chihuahua -domed shaped head -prominent
bulging eyes -severity varies -common
(normal) in some breeds
21
Urinary Tract Deformities
  • Vary in severity
  • Some can be
  • corrected surgically in some cases
  • treated with drugs
  • More common in dogs than cats
  • More common in females than males

22
Heart Defects
  • Puppies born with heart murmur
  • By weaning (7-8 weeks) not normal and bears
    watching (i.e. dont sell to uniformed owners)
  • After six months consider a more serious
    condition
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com