Cascade Scottish Terrier Club
Scottie Medical Information
an
excerpt from
Scottish Terriers: Strength
and Courage in a Compact Package,
by Camille
Partridge, Gaelforce Scottish Terriers
Medical Information
The Scottish
Terrier is afflicted with a few heritable disorders of varying
severity. There is a blood test for only one of these, unfortunately.
Responsible breeders do everything they can to reduce and eliminate
these disorders from their breeding stock, but genes can re-combine in
unexpected ways, and so even the best laid plans can go awry.
von Willebrand's Disease
The most
serious disorder is a bleeding/clotting disorder called von
Willebrand's Disease (vWD). For a Scottie to be a bleeder, i.e., have
abnormally long, perhaps life-threatening non-clotting times, both
parents must be carriers, as the gene is dominant/recessive in
inheritance. After several years of work, with funding from the
Scottish Terrier Club of Michigan, AKC, Morris Animal Foundation, and
others, a team at Michigan State University has developed a definitive
genetic test for Type III vWD in Scottish Terriers. The test is DNA
based, with samples collected using a soft brush on the inside of the
cheek of the dog. It is non-invasive and painless. The results of the
test place the dog in one of three categories: clear, carrier, or
affected. The test is 100% accurate. As a result, all breeders should
test animals being bred to ensure that no carriers or affecteds be bred
to anything other than a dog that has tested clear. If two clear dogs
are bred together, it is a certainty (barring an individual random
mutation) that the puppies will all be clear as well. All puppy buyers
should demand to see the test results on the parents of the puppies
they consider.
Scottie Cramp
The Scottie
Cramp is a neuromuscular disorder treated in severe cases with vitamin
E and mild tranquilizers. It is not painful for the dog, but afflicted
animals should not be bred.
Cranio-Mandibular Osteopathy
Cranio-Mandibular Osteopathy is a disease shared with Westies and
Cairns, as close cousins. It involves abnormal growth of the bone in
the jaw of the afflicted puppy. It is severely painful, and should be
eliminated from a breeding program. At this time the only test for
carrier status in a dog is to test-breed. Treatment of the afflicted
pup involves high-dose steroids and intensive nursing by the owner.
In General
Of course,
Scotties are just as susceptible as any other breed to viral and
bacterial transmissible diseases, cancer, accident, gum disease, etc.
Normal health care by a licensed veterinarian is very important to the
Scot's health. There is current debate on the inheritability of
epilepsy, and hypothyroidism, diabetes, and other immune-mediated
diseases. It seems likely that there is a genetic component to these
problems, but the exact mode of inheritance is likely to be polygenic,
and never completely predictable.
Visit the STCA website health pages for more information on Scottie
health disorders.
Copyright
2001 by Camille Partridge. All rights reserved. Used by permission. No
part of this article to be reprinted without author's
permission. Camille
Partridge is a breeder, owner, and tireless champion of Scottish
Terriers. She is active in earthdog activities through the Oregon
Trail’s End Earthdog Club. The most recent (in 1995) Scottish
Terrier to win the coveted Best in Show title at the very prestigious
Westminster Dog Show was Camille’s first homebred champion,
Am/Can. Ch. Gaelforce Postscript.