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The Veterinary Record, Vol 138, Issue 15, 358-360
Copyright © 1996 by British Veterinary Association

Canine epilepsy: a genetic counselling programme for keeshonds

S. J. G. Hall MA, PhD1 and M. E. Wallace MA, PhD2

1 Department of Clinical Veterinary Medicine, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ES
2 Department of Genetics, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EH

The predisposition of keeshonds (Dutch barge dogs) to an idiopathic epilepsy appears to be determined by a single autosomal recessive gene. The pedigrees of 15 litters which included animals diagnosed as epileptic (‘fitters’) were compared with those of 34 contemporary, normal animals. The pedigrees of all the fitters traced back, on both the paternal and maternal sides, to a common ancestor. Subsequently, further pedigrees and details of litters were gathered. If both parents of a fitter were heterozygous (‘carriers’), the progeny (120 in number) of all known carrier x carrier matings would be expected to have a ratio of three phenotypically normal animals to one fitter, that is, 90:30. The ratio observed (91:29) was not significantly different. The Keeshond Club has published a list from which the identities of carriers can be inferred, with the intention that known carriers should be excluded from breeding. A genetic counselling programme has been in operation since 1989, which is based on advising breeders on the probability that the offspring of proposed matings would be fitters or carriers; advice has been given on 77 proposed matings. The mean probability that the proposed matings would result in carriers has declined significantly, and this is consistent with a decline in the frequency of the gene for this form of epilepsy in the breed.







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Copyright © 1996 British Veterinary Association