Chondrodysplasia (ITGA10-related)

What It Is

ITGA10-related chondrodysplasia is an inherited skeletal dysplasia caused by pathogenic variation affecting integrin alpha 10, disrupting cartilage development and producing disproportionate growth, limb shortening, or skeletal abnormalities in affected dogs.

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

Breeds Affected: Karelian Bear Dog


The Idiot-Proof Explanation

This is a genetic bone-and-cartilage growth problem. The dog’s skeleton does not develop normally, which can lead to short limbs, abnormal proportions, pain, lameness, or mobility issues depending on severity.


What Causes It

ITGA10-related chondrodysplasia is inherited and affects cartilage development, which is essential for normal skeletal growth.

Because the skeleton is affected during development, signs may be noticed while the puppy is growing or when abnormal movement becomes obvious.

  • The condition is genetic and breed-associated.
  • Cartilage development is disrupted, affecting bone growth.
  • Affected dogs may have abnormal limb proportions, lameness, or orthopedic pain.
  • Carrier testing, when available, is important for breeding prevention.

This is not “just a different build.” If the dog is painful or structurally abnormal, that matters.


What This Means for Life With This Dog

Life with an affected dog can mean growth monitoring, radiographs, weight control, controlled exercise, and orthopedic support.

Mild dogs may manage well with careful lifestyle choices. Severe dogs may face chronic pain, mobility issues, or referral-level orthopedic care.

For breeders, this is not a shrug-and-breed-around-it situation. Genetic skeletal disease belongs in the test-and-plan category.


Can It Be Fixed?

The genetic skeletal defect cannot be reversed. Treatment focuses on comfort, mobility, weight control, orthopedic evaluation, and preventing affected puppies through responsible testing.


Symptoms Owners May Notice

Short limbs or abnormal proportions: The dog may look disproportionate or develop uneven limb growth during puppyhood.

Lameness or abnormal gait: Movement may look stiff, uneven, painful, or mechanically wrong.

Joint pain or reluctance to move: The dog may avoid jumping, stairs, long walks, or rough play because the body is not enjoying the engineering.

Growth abnormalities: Owners may notice that the puppy is not developing like littermates or has limb shape changes as growth continues.


Treatment Options

Exam, imaging, and genetic testing: Your vet may use exam findings, radiographs, breed history, and DNA testing when available to confirm the likely cause.

Supportive orthopedic care: Weight control, controlled exercise, pain management, traction flooring, and rehab may help affected dogs function more comfortably.

Specialist care for severe cases: Orthopedic referral may be needed if limb deformity, pain, or joint disease is significant.


Recovery and Aftercare

Aftercare depends on severity. Owners may need to monitor growth, keep the dog lean, restrict high-impact activity, and revisit the plan as the skeleton matures.


What Happens If You Wait

A painful growing puppy needs evaluation early.

Waiting can mean missed windows for orthopedic planning, worsening pain, and more damage from abnormal mechanics.


Cost Reality Check

ITGA10-related chondrodysplasia costs depend on severity, diagnostic needs, and whether orthopedic support or surgery is required.

Care Level What It May Include Estimated Cost
Initial workup Exam, genetic testing when available, radiographs, and initial orthopedic assessment. $250-$1,000
Ongoing management Monitoring, medication, rehab, weight management, repeat imaging, and mobility support. $500-$2,500+
Severe case Orthopedic referral, advanced imaging, surgery, or long-term pain and mobility management. $3,000-$10,000+

Severity of skeletal changes: A mild proportional change and a painful limb deformity are not the same financial creature.

Need for imaging: Radiographs, repeat views, and specialist interpretation add cost but also actual information, which remains annoyingly useful.

Surgery or referral: Referral-level orthopedic care is expensive, especially when growth and joint alignment are involved.

Long-term support: Pain management, rehab, home adjustments, and rechecks can become ongoing needs.


Budget Reality Check

Budget Item Estimated Cost
Exam and radiographs $200-$800
Genetic testing, when available $75-$250
Pain management and monitoring $300-$1,500+
Rehabilitation or mobility support $500-$2,500+
Orthopedic referral or surgery $3,000-$10,000+

Lifetime Cost Reality

Case Pattern Possible Lifetime Cost
Mild monitored case $300-$2,000+
Chronic support case $2,000-$8,000+
Severe orthopedic case $5,000-$15,000+

Tell Me What I Should Really Expect

ITGA10-related chondrodysplasia is rare, but rare does not mean irrelevant.

For an affected dog, the future is about comfort, mobility, and honest orthopedic management. For breeders, the future should be about testing and not making more puppies with preventable skeletal disease.