Dachshund Health Guide: IVDD, PRA & Intervertebral Disc Disease Prevention
Published: 2026-05-30 · Updated: 2026-05-30
The Dachshund's iconic long body and short legs—the very traits that define the breed—are also the source of its most serious health challenge: Intervertebral Disc Disease (IVDD). Dachshunds have a 10-12× higher risk of IVDD compared to other breeds, with an estimated 19-25%...
Breed Health Profile
| Profile Type | Breed Health Profile |
|---|---|
| Common Triggers / Risk Factors | Chondrodystrophic conformation, Jumping from furniture, Stair use, Genetic predisposition |
| Owner Mindset | Proactive health management, Informed ownership |
The Dachshund's iconic long body and short legs—the very traits that define the breed—are also the source of its most serious health challenge: Intervertebral Disc Disease (IVDD). Dachshunds have a 10-12× higher risk of IVDD compared to other breeds, with an estimated 19-25% experiencing clinical disc herniation during their lifetime. The FGF4 retrogene on chromosome 12, which causes chondrodystrophy (abnormal cartilage development leading to short legs), also accelerates intervertebral disc degeneration starting from as early as 2 years of age.
Genetic Health Table
| Condition | Susceptibility Genes | Incidence Rate | Early Screening |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intervertebral Disc Disease (IVDD — Hansen Type I) | FGF4 retrogene (CFA12) — chondrodystrophy; CDDY/CDPA haplotype | 19-25% lifetime clinical incidence; 40-50% radiographic disc calcification by age 4 | FGF4 DNA test (CDDY/CDPA); spinal radiographs for disc calcification scoring at 2-4 years |
| Progressive Retinal Atrophy (cord1-PRA) | RPGRIP1 (c.926G>A mutation, autosomal recessive) | 8-12% affected in Miniature Dachshunds | DNA test; annual CAER eye exam starting at 12 months |
| Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA) | Polygenic (increased prevalence in Miniature Dachshunds) | 1-2% in Miniatures | Cardiac auscultation at 8-12 weeks; echocardiogram if murmur detected |
| Epilepsy (Idiopathic) | Unknown (suspected polygenic with environmental triggers) | 2-3% in some lines | Neurological exam at first seizure; MRI + CSF analysis if cluster seizures occur |
| Patellar Luxation | Polygenic (small breed association) | 3-5% | Orthopedic physical exam annually |
IVDD prevention protocol: (1) FGF4 DNA test to determine CDDY copy number—dogs with two copies (CDDY/CDDY) have the highest IVDD risk; (2) Weight management is the single most modifiable risk factor—keep Dachshunds lean (body condition score 4-5/9); (3) Use ramps for furniture access—eliminate jumping on/off couches and beds; (4) Harness, never a collar, for walks to avoid cervical disc stress; (5) Core strengthening exercises (controlled walking, balance work) build paraspinal muscle support. Learn the early signs of IVDD (reluctance to jump, yelping when picked up, hunched posture, dragging paws) and seek emergency veterinary care at the first neurological sign—the window for successful conservative management closes rapidly once deep pain sensation is lost.
Related Topics
References & Further Reading
- ASPCA. Common Dog & Cat Behavior Issues. aspca.org/pet-care
- American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA). Pet Behavior Resources. aaha.org
- Journal of Veterinary Behavior (Elsevier). Clinical Applications and Research. sciencedirect.com
- American Veterinary Society of Animal Behavior (AVSAB). Position Statements & Resources. avsab.org
Citations are provided for educational reference. Content is reviewed periodically but does not replace professional veterinary advice. If your pet shows signs of illness, contact a licensed veterinarian immediately.