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EXERCISE
AND THE DYSPLASTIC PUP
Kitty Carpadus |

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Some years ago, Kay Rogers
wrote an article in the Pyr News and Notes entitled "A Dysplastic Dog
Can Lead a Happy Life." In it, she told about using an exercise,
developed at Guide Dogs for the Blind, to restore a dysplastic dog to
useful service. I read it, murmured "How interesting," and promptly
shoved it to the back of my mind. In 1970, I had occasion to look it up.
My oldest son, Randy, had long looked forward to a Pyr pup of his own.
When on his twelfth birthday he was given a cuddly ball of fluff, it
was hard to say who was more excited, the boy or the dog. From that day
on, the two were rarely separated. They slept together, ate together
(yes, we had trouble keeping boy at the table and dog on the floor),
played together, worked together, did everything except to go school
together. The pup could hardly wait for the school bus to come in the
afternoon; the boy could hardly wait to finish his chores so the two of
them could go for a long walk through the fields.
We routinely x-rayed our pups at six months of age, so it was with
little trepidation that we x-rayed Randy's dog - just routine. Imagine
our shock when we heard the verdict: the pup had been born without hip
sockets!! They hadn't worn away - they just were never there.
"Impossible", we said, "he moves perfectly well!" "Sorry", said the
vet; "here's the proof." The recommendation was grim: immediate surgery
or euthanasia. Prognosis: very poor. The pup, said the vet, was doomed
to the short, painful life of a cripple. But he reckoned without the
love of a boy for his dog.
Randy knows what handicaps are; he knows they must be fought, not given
in to. So it was not in his nature to give in to the grim prognosis. If
it was within his power to help, his pup would live. And so began a
year-long battle.
At six months, the pup moved as though he hurt everywhere. He lay down
to eat; sat in preference to standing, walked in preference to running,
bounded with hind legs together instead of trotting. So Randy began the
Pfaffenberger exercises.
Putting the choke collar high behind his pup's ears, holding his head
erect, they walked quickly the length of our country road (about
one-tenth of a mile) the first two days. The next two days saw the
distance doubled; the days after that, trebled, and so on. In addition,
hills were found to climb; plowed fields were run; creeks were swum and
carts were pulled. But, every day, chain behind the ears, head high,
gait the measured distance. In a little while they were travelling two
miles a day. It rained, and they trotted down the road. Summer came and
they ran the plowed fields. Fall found them on long hikes. Chain behind
the ears, head high, trot.
We had been told that surgery was inevitable and Randy could not stand
the thought of his friend in pain. Still, there was the fact that the
dog could no longer be confined inside a six-foot fence. When he wanted
out, he went over the top. And although the boy was now quite tall, the
dog still wanted to look him in the eye, so spent a great deal of time
on his hind legs.
At 18 months, we re-x-rayed. The heads of the femurs had smoothed out.
They had worn false sockets in soft tissue, smoothing out the rough
spots in the bone. No more grating of bone against bone and no
arthritis had developed. The hips weren't normal, to be sure, but they
were functional. Randy and his pup had won their battle. No surgery, no
euthanasia. Just a boy and his dog, running through the fields.
Why does this exercise work? A dog is so built that his center of
gravity is well forward. That is, if you were to suspend his body at a
point where he was perfectly balanced, fore and aft, you would put your
balance point just behind the shoulder in most dogs. As the dog lowers
his head, he throws his center of gravity forward, putting more weight
on the forequarters, freeing his hindquarters for drive necessary for
either speed or power.
According to some authorities, 60 to 70% of a dog's weight is normally
on the forequarters. If the head is raised, throwing the center of
gravity (and therefore the weight) toward the rear, as much as 50% of
the weight is thrown on the hindquarters. This forces the pelvic
muscles to carry more load and causes them to build themselves up. As
the muscles are used and increase in mass, they themselves take more of
the load of supporting the dog. The wearing of the femur against the
acetabulum is similar to seating a bearing. Eventually bearing and seat
match each other without causing further wear. If there is pain in the
early stages of exercise, this can be minimized by buffered aspirin.
Will this work with a dog who has already developed arthritis? I don't
know. Perhaps for these, surgery is in order. That is up to you and
your vet. But it is one argument in favor of early x-raying. If caught
at an early age, dysplasia need never mean pain to your dog. Whether
you elect exercise or surgery, a dysplastic dog can live a normal and
relatively pain-free life (though never bred.). Kay Rogers proved it;
she took a dysplastic dog to her Championship. Randy proved it: his dog
is a champion in his eyes. Isn't that where it really counts?
NOTE: Since I wrote this more than 25 years ago, I
have seen dozens of dogs brought to a pain-free, functional life with
this exercise. The ideal speed is a fast walk for the human, a slow
trot for the dog. Great exercise for both dog and human.
Good Luck.Catherine de la Cruz
reprinted with kind permission from Catherine de la
Cruz

The above information is simply informational. It's intent is not to
replace the advice of a veterinarian nor to assist you in making a
diagnosis of your pet. Please consult with your own veterinarian for
confirmation of any diagnosis. Your pets life may depend on it.