Breeding Selection: Reducing Hip Dysplasia Through Genetic Testing and Data
February 2026How breeders can reduce hip dysplasia prevalence using estimated breeding values, genomic testing, family data analysis, and systematic offspring tracking.
Orthopedic insights from 25 years of operating on German Shepherds and herding breeds. Real surgical experience, honest outcomes, and practical guidance for owners facing this diagnosis.
How breeders can reduce hip dysplasia prevalence using estimated breeding values, genomic testing, family data analysis, and systematic offspring tracking.
Structured swimming therapy protocols including introduction phases, severity-based maintenance programs, pool versus natural water, and recognizing overexertion.
How body weight directly impacts hip dysplasia progression. Biomechanics of excess weight, caloric calculations, diet selection, and long-term maintenance strategies.
A complete explanation of canine hip dysplasia. What it is, how it develops, signs to watch for, and why shepherd breeds are particularly affected.
The difference between detecting hip dysplasia at four months versus twenty-four months is the difference between having options and accepting inevitability.
FHO, TPO, or THR? After hundreds of hip surgeries, here is how I decide which procedure gives each dog the best chance at a pain-free life.
I have spent the better part of my career with my hands inside German Shepherds. Not a particularly poetic way to describe orthopedic surgery, but it is accurate. Hip dysplasia has become something of a specialty by necessity. In a busy orthopedic practice, you see what the community brings you, and shepherd owners bring me a steady stream of German Shepherds, Australian Shepherds, Belgian Malinois, and various herding breed mixes with hips that are letting them down.
This site exists because I grew tired of repeating myself. Not to patients, mind you. I will happily explain hip dysplasia mechanics to a worried owner at two in the morning. But the misinformation online has become unbearable. Supplement companies claiming miracle cures. Forums where well-meaning owners share advice that makes me wince. Breeders who genuinely believe a single OFA certification guarantees healthy puppies.
What you will find here is the truth as I understand it from operating on these dogs week after week. I will share my successes and my failures. The cases that went perfectly and the ones that taught me humility. If you are facing hip dysplasia in your Shepherd, you deserve better than marketing copy dressed up as medical advice.