Gilbey 1,446 Posted September 14, 2019 Report Share Posted September 14, 2019 Rather them off than on, after one of mine got a meaty U shaped tear Quote Link to post
Crackers 807 Posted September 14, 2019 Report Share Posted September 14, 2019 14 hours ago, bird said: true , bryn had few probs with his, ripped them, ended up having to let them heal, tried taping them to protect them , when i had Buck i made sure that the breeder took them off as small pup, best way i think, he full on when after any thing, in any ground, or cover , never any probs with him in 7 years .! I’ve taken them off for a fair few mates litters takes minutes but they can be weeks off when ripped injured with them best off!! Quote Link to post
morton 5,368 Posted September 22, 2019 Report Share Posted September 22, 2019 On 13/09/2019 at 15:32, sandymere said: Do the Dew(claws)? M. Christine Zink DVM, PhD, DACVSMR I am a vet that works exclusively with performance dogs, developing rehabilitation programs for injured dogs or dogs that have had surgery as a result of performance-relatedi njuries. I have seen many dogs now, especially field trial/hunt test and agility dogs, that have had chronic carpal arthritis, frequently so severe that they have to be retired or at least carefully managed for the rest of their careers. Of the over 30 dogs I have seen with carpal arthritis, only one has had dewclaws. The others have all had them removed. If you look at an anatomy book (Miller’s Guide to the Anatomy of Dogs is an excellent one – see figure below) you will see that there are 5 tendons attached to the dewclaw. Of course, at the other end of a tendon is a muscle, and that means that if you cut off the dew claws, there are 5 muscle bundles that will become atrophied from disuse. Those muscles indicate that the dewclaws have a function. That function is to prevent torque on the leg. Each time the foot lands on the ground, particularly when the dog is cantering or galloping, the dewclaw is in touch with the ground. If the dog then needs to turn, the dewclaw digs into the ground to support the lower leg and prevent torque. If the dog doesn’t have a dewclaw, the leg twists. A lifetime of that and the result can be carpal arthritis. Remember: the dog is doing the activity regardless, and the pressures on the leg have to go somewhere.They can be absorbed by the dewclaw, or they will move up and down the leg to the toes, carpus, elbow, and shoulders. Perhaps you are thinking, “I never have had one of my dogs have carpal pain or arthritis.” Well, we need to remember that dogs, by their very nature, do not tell us about mild to moderate pain. If a dog was to be asked by an emergency room nurse to give the level of his pain on a scale from 0 to 10, with 10 being the worst, their scale would be 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. Most of our dogs, especially if they deal with pain that is of gradual onset, just deal with it and don’t complain unless it is excruciating. But when I palpate the carpal joints of older dogs without dewclaws, I almost always elicit pain with relatively minimal manipulation. As to the possibility of injuries to dew claws. Most veterinarians will say that such injuries actually are not very common at all. And if they do occur, then they are dealt with like any other injury. In my opinion, it is far better to deal with an injury than to cut the dew claws off of all dogs “just in case.” Anatomical diagram viewing the medial side of a dog’s left front leg demonstrating the five tendons that attach to the dewclaw. Lurchers are a very different animal to the rest of the mutts that enter a sporting field,no other hunting canine runs as a lurcher runs,no other hunting dog runs with the pace and ambition of a lurcher.lurchers should all have their dew claws removed,the amount of damage suffered by lurchers with ripped and torn dew claws far,far ,far exceeds the hunting hounds that never ever experience the trials and tribulations that the lurcher experiences at the pace it pursues.Many of the tenderest injuries ive encountered on lurchers is damaged dew claws,lurchers that run on unforgiving environments.If you run your runner on soft meadow you may never experience the fact that harsh ground is fecking hard on dew claws. 3 Quote Link to post
bird 9,946 Posted September 22, 2019 Report Share Posted September 22, 2019 5 hours ago, morton said: Lurchers are a very different animal to the rest of the mutts that enter a sporting field,no other hunting canine runs as a lurcher runs,no other hunting dog runs with the pace and ambition of a lurcher.lurchers should all have their dew claws removed,the amount of damage suffered by lurchers with ripped and torn dew claws far,far ,far exceeds the hunting hounds that never ever experience the trials and tribulations that the lurcher experiences at the pace it pursues.Many of the tenderest injuries ive encountered on lurchers is damaged dew claws,lurchers that run on unforgiving environments.If you run your runner on soft meadow you may never experience the fact that harsh ground is fecking hard on dew claws. spot on, above and running 30-40mph in the dark, they get enough injury's as it s , with out ripping the dew claws out , better off . Quote Link to post
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