
Hi there
My Golden Retriever boy has OCD. The symptoms exhibited at 6 months in his right elbow resulted in an operation to clean the head of the joint up and although he will no doubt have quite bad arthritis when he's older, he is 5 years old this month and has a full life.
The ortho specialist who operated on him said he almost always sees the condition in large young male dogs, usually those with a bouncy personality, and even though they had to operate on the joint causing pain, the high resolution x-rays they took, showed that he had OCD in several of his joints, not just the one causing pain.
The road to recovery was really long for us (and my dog) as he was so difficult to keep calm and still! He had several relapses whereby he would do something stupid and then put himself back a couple of weeks. Just recently, he was starting to limp again, so more x-rays (at our regular vet this time) and he is now showing some arthritis in one of his hips (stiff sometimes). He will now be on Metacam and joint supplements for the rest of his life. Thankfully, he is fit and well again now, which is a blessing.
I just wanted to make the point really, that this condition must be made worse when a large boned dog is too bouncy or is exercised too much. When they spend ages having rough play with another dog, I consider that just as damaging to developing joints too. The specialist said the OCD was not something the dog was born with, but he had the pre-disposition to develop the condition, aggrevated by his bouncy self (he's a big boy also at around 40 - 42 kg). He advised that he not be used for breeding (he is the son of a 2x Crufts CC winner!) and I would have liked to show him but he is now castrated, which wasn't done until he was 2 and fully developed.
So my advise is that if anyone out there has a large-boned adolescent male dog, not to let them do too much jumping/hard core wrestling or anything which could cause impact on those delicate developing joints. We tried to do everything right with our boy, but he was like a whirling dirvish most of the time, thus the length of time of took for him to recover from the op.
To the OP, please don't think your dog is a dudd. My boy is just so beautiful, not a brain cell in his head, but is the most loving and loyal dog you could get. I love him so much, he would never be second best to me, he just wrecked his joints at the crucial time in his development.
It's such a difficult thing to get the balance right with these young dogs, they have so much energy to burn!
Good luck with your boy, I hope he gets sorted soon.
Tanya