Chondrodysplasia (ITGA10-related)

What It Is

ITGA10-related chondrodysplasia is an inherited skeletal dysplasia caused by pathogenic variation affecting integrin alpha 10, a gene involved in cartilage development. Affected dogs may have disproportionate growth, shortened limbs, skeletal abnormalities, lameness, or mobility problems depending on severity.

Also Called: ITGA10-related chondrodysplasia; disproportionate dwarfism; inherited skeletal dysplasia

Breeds Affected: Chinook; Karelian Bear Dog; Norwegian Elkhound


The Idiot-Proof Explanation

This is a genetic bone-and-cartilage growth problem. The puppy’s skeleton does not develop in normal proportions, which can mean short limbs, abnormal stance, pain, lameness, and a body that needs management instead of everyone pretending the dog is just “built funny.”


What Causes It

This form is linked to ITGA10 and is inherited as a recessive condition. That means an affected puppy generally has to inherit the risky variant from both parents. Carriers can look normal, which is exactly why genetic testing exists instead of relying on vibes and wishful thinking.


What Owners Actually Need To Know

Potential owners should ask about genetic testing and breeder screening before buying into a line where this condition is relevant. Affected dogs may need orthopedic monitoring, pain management, careful exercise, weight control, and realistic expectations about mobility. This is not a “wait and see forever” problem if the dog is painful or moving wrong.


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