What Is Hip Dysplasia in Dogs? Causes, Signs, and Treatment Options
Definition
Hip dysplasia is a developmental orthopedic condition in which the hip joint's ball (femoral head) and socket (acetabulum) don't fit together correctly, causing abnormal joint movement, cartilage damage, and eventually osteoarthritis.
Veterinary Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a licensed veterinarian for your pet's specific health needs. In an emergency, contact your nearest emergency vet immediately or call the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (888-426-4435).
Reviewed by the Hushku Editorial Team ยท Sources: ASPCA, WSAVA, Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine
Quick Summary
Hip dysplasia is a malformation of the hip joint where the ball and socket don't fit correctly, causing abnormal wear and progressive arthritis. It's among the most common orthopedic conditions in dogs, particularly large and giant breeds. It can be managed very effectively โ many dogs live full, comfortable lives with appropriate treatment โ but it requires lifelong management and ideally early intervention.
Hip dysplasia is diagnosed in an estimated 15โ80% of certain dog breeds โ one of the most common orthopedic conditions in veterinary medicine. It is simultaneously one of the most feared diagnoses by new dog owners and one of the most manageable when caught early and treated appropriately.
The condition is not a death sentence or even necessarily a major quality of life limitation. Many dogs with hip dysplasia, properly managed, live active, comfortable lives until old age. The key variables are severity, early detection, maintenance of healthy body weight, and the selection of appropriate treatment modalities.
Understanding hip dysplasia gives you the tools to recognize it earlier, choose the right intervention at the right time, and have realistic expectations about what management looks like long-term.
Symptoms
- โขBunny-hopping gait when running
- โขDifficulty rising from lying position
- โขStiffness especially in cold weather or after rest
- โขReluctance to climb stairs or jump
- โขReduced hindlimb muscle mass compared to front
- โขPain response when hips are manipulated
- โขWide-based hindlimb stance
- โขBehavioral changes: irritability, reduced activity
Causes
- โขGenetic predisposition (polygenic inheritance)
- โขRapid growth rate in large breeds
- โขExcess caloric intake during puppy growth phase
- โขOver-supplementation with calcium in puppies
- โขHigh-impact exercise on immature joints
- โขBreed factors โ German Shepherds, Labs, Goldens, Rottweilers, Bulldogs, Mastiffs highest rates
Treatment
- โขWeight management โ the highest-impact non-surgical intervention
- โขLow-impact exercise and physical rehabilitation
- โขNSAIDs for pain management (veterinary-prescribed)
- โขMonoclonal antibody therapy (Librela)
- โขJoint supplements (omega-3s, glucosamine/chondroitin)
- โขTriple/double pelvic osteotomy (young dogs, pre-arthritic)
- โขTotal hip replacement (most effective long-term solution for severe cases)
Prevention
- โขSelect puppies from OFA or PennHIP-certified parents in high-risk breeds
- โขFeed large-breed puppy food (lower calcium/phosphorus ratios than adult formulas) during growth
- โขAvoid over-supplementation with calcium or excess calories during the growth phase
- โขModerate exercise during puppyhood โ no forced sustained running on growing joints
- โขMaintain healthy body weight throughout life
What Goes Wrong: The Pathophysiology
A normal hip joint is a ball-and-socket joint with a deep, well-formed socket (acetabulum) and a round femoral head (the ball at the top of the thigh bone) that fits snugly within it. The contact is cushioned by articular cartilage, and the joint is held in place by strong ligaments.
In hip dysplasia, the socket is too shallow and/or the femoral head is malformed. The ball doesn't seat correctly and can move around within the socket โ a quality called laxity. This abnormal movement causes two problems:
In young dogs (4โ12 months), the abnormal joint movement causes pain from micro-trauma as the joint surfaces grind against each other in ways they shouldn't. This is the "pain from laxity" phase and often when owners first notice symptoms.
The body responds to the abnormal cartilage damage by thickening the joint capsule, laying down scar tissue, and remodeling the bone. This process causes the secondary osteoarthritis that produces chronic pain in older dogs. Over months to years, the joint becomes more stable but less functional and increasingly arthritic.
The severity of this progression is influenced by: the degree of initial malformation, body weight (every pound on a dysplastic joint increases wear), activity type (high-impact activities accelerate damage), and how early supportive management begins.
Recognizing Hip Dysplasia: Signs by Age
In puppies and young dogs (4 months โ 2 years):
In adult and senior dogs (with secondary osteoarthritis):
Hip dysplasia is bilateral (both hips affected) in most dogs, though one side is usually worse. Cruciate ligament rupture is typically unilateral and sudden onset. Degenerative myelopathy causes progressive neurological dysfunction rather than orthopedic pain.
Diagnosis: What the Vet Is Looking For
The vet will manipulate the hip joints to assess range of motion, pain on extension, laxity (Ortolani sign โ a click felt when the femoral head relocates into the socket with specific manipulation), and muscle symmetry.
The gold standard for diagnosis and staging. X-rays reveal the degree of joint malformation, the depth of the acetabulum, the shape of the femoral head, and the extent of secondary arthritic changes. Radiographs should be taken under sedation for accurate positioning.
A specialized radiographic assessment that quantifies hip joint laxity more precisely than standard OFA views. PennHIP can be performed from 16 weeks of age, earlier than OFA's minimum (24 months). For high-risk breed puppies, early PennHIP screening can identify severe cases before waiting until adulthood.
The Orthopedic Foundation for Animals registers hip evaluations in the US. Breeding dogs in high-risk breeds should have OFA certification (Fair, Good, or Excellent rating). Always ask breeders for OFA results for both parents.
Treatment Options: From Conservative to Surgical
Treatment choice is guided by the dog's age, severity of dysplasia, degree of secondary arthritis, and owner resources and preferences.
Conservative (non-surgical) management: Appropriate for mild-to-moderate cases and dogs who are not surgical candidates.
Surgical options:
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a dog with hip dysplasia live a normal life?
Yes โ many dogs with hip dysplasia live full, active, comfortable lives with appropriate management. The key factors are: early diagnosis, maintaining ideal body weight, appropriate exercise (low-impact, regular), effective pain management, and prompt intervention when arthritis progresses. Dogs with severe untreated hip dysplasia do not live as comfortably โ which is why early diagnosis and proactive management matter.
At what age is hip dysplasia diagnosed in dogs?
Hip dysplasia can be suspected as early as 4โ6 months of age in severely affected puppies (hind-end weakness, bunny hopping). Formal radiographic diagnosis is typically made from 6 months onward; OFA's standard evaluation requires 24 months. PennHIP can evaluate from 16 weeks. Many dogs don't show obvious clinical symptoms until secondary arthritis develops at 1โ2 years or later.
What breeds are most commonly affected by hip dysplasia?
Large and giant breeds are most affected. Highest rates: German Shepherds, Labrador Retrievers, Golden Retrievers, Rottweilers, Bulldogs, Mastiffs, Saint Bernards, and Great Danes. Smaller breeds are affected at lower rates but not immune. Mixed-breed dogs have lower average rates than purebreds in high-risk lines.
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