griffinej5
Posted : 8/21/2012 10:26:30 PM
It's starting to make more sense to me now. It's a lot of money though. If I send in the heart and eyes, and then I am also planning to take him to do hips and patellas. I'm debating a BAER also. He's not deaf, but cavaliers are also prone to syringiomyeloma. If I understand it correctly, if he has a syrinx, it'll show up as abnormal. The only way to know for certain though is an MRI. If it shows as normal, he probably doesn't have a syrinx. The other part to that though is a dog can have a syrinx and show no symptoms, or have symptoms that don't match the size of the syrinx, etc. Cavaliers can become deaf later on in life also. Hips and patellas are of course one and done. Eyes and heart we have to keep looking at of course.
Gina, I wonder how many pet dog owners know they can even do this stuff. I knew the breeders were also supposed to do it, but I had no idea that I could do it until maybe a month ago. I didn't know about the health clinics, that I could take my pet dog to the clinic and get him checked out, etc. I don't think many people do either, because at least while I was there, though I was admittedly there early first thing when it opened in the morning, the only other people there were breeders and people who were showing. This was the regional specialty. The clinic I am planning to take him to for the x-rays appears to have more people with pets coming. If I had no clue, I imagine there are lots of pet dogs, and lots of valuable data not recorded.