How to do the grooming of Cavalier King Charles Spaniel
Owing Cavalier King Charles Spaniel is a good thing but the difficult part is to take care of the dog. While owing any dog you need to give more concern to its medical well- being and if you are the owner of Cavalier King Charles Spaniel your concern becomes more because they are the toy dogs that are more prone to various medical problems. Despite some regular medical check-ups you also need to consider some other tests and medical checkups for your Cavalier King Charles Spaniel to ensure its good health.
Mitral Valve Disease (Heart Problems)
In the last few years, it has been observed that Cavalier King Charles Spaniel is more prone to catching with for Mitral Valve Disease (Heart) which is quite critical. It was happening with considerably less serious than the web has driven people in general, to accept. It is less serious in Cavaliers than numerous different breeds.
Episodic falling syndrome (EFS)
Another major medical issue for this breed is EFS which is a genetic problem. This is considerably more predominant in this breed. EFS looks like Epilepsy. It is regularly misdiagnosed in that capacity, however, it is vastly different. EFS isn’t commonly deadly, however, it looks that way when they seize, and it is anything but a lovely thing.
Hereditary Test
To diagnose the valve problems and eye problems the best test to be done is the hereditary test. The test should be possible by swab, (DNA) and all things considered, it, not at all like outputs that they accomplish for heart and eyes, lets you know whether the dog conveys the hereditary data for something that may show genuinely later on.
They incline toward hereditary tests, in light of the fact that the test we have as of now for heart and eyes, that lone gives an image of the canine as he stands now, not what could be available later on. That is the reason these outputs/tests should be done at regular intervals for reproducing hounds. So we as raisers don't intentionally pass these issues on, yet we are just human, and can just pass by the trial on the dog at that point. It isn't in any capacity a test that predicts what will occur, that is the reason I lean toward DNA if accessible. Be that as it may, we test with what we have. Possibly sometime DNA will get accessible for MV and breed explicit eye issues for Cavaliers, who knows.
EFS by and large are matched with tests for Dry Eye and Curly Coat. From the outset I thought, well that is bizarre, who cares on the off chance that they have wavy coats? Dry Eye, in the end, brings about a slick region around the eyes, where there is some balding and inevitably an Alopecia. So we don't need that.
The Cavalier King Charles Spaniel is inclined to issues with Patellas. This is only an extravagant method for saying they get slipping kneecaps. Your vet can, for the most part, analyze that just by basic palpation and expansion and let you know whether there is an issue. If it is the case, it could either be the ideal opportunity for the OFA x-beams, or you could essentially expel that canine from your program without even a second's pause.
