Von Willebrand Disease II
Breeds
Relevance Rating: There is some evidence or research available for these breeds
Relevance Rating: The test is unknown, there is no evidence (i.e. research) available, or it has not been evaluated yet. These tests may or may not be meaningful for these breeds
GTPs
General
Disease Name
Von Willebrand Disease II
OMIA
1339
Gene Name
VWF
Mutation
G>A in a2 domain
Mutation 2
A>G in a2 domain
Mutation 3
c.4937A>G
Test Type
Genetic Disease/Disorder
Details
Von Willebrand?s disease (vWD) is a blood disease caused by a deficiency of von Willebrand Factor (vWF), an adhesive glycoprotein in the blood required for normal blood clotting. A lack of vWF impairs platelet stickiness and clumping. Symptoms can include: spontaneous hemorrhage from mucosal surfaces, nosebleeds, blood in the faeces, bloody urine, bleeding gums, excessive vaginal bleeding, bruising, prolonged bleeding after surgery or trauma, blood loss anemia. The inheritance of the severe forms (Types II and III) is autosomal recessive. The milder form (Type I) may be autosomal recessive or incompletely dominant. This is the most common hereditary blood clotting disorder in dogs.
Details 2
Von Willebrand?s disease (vWD) is a blood disease caused by a deficiency of von Willebrand Factor (vWF), an adhesive glycoprotein in the blood required for normal blood clotting. A lack of vWF impairs platelet stickiness and clumping. Symptoms can include: spontaneous hemorrhage from mucosal surfaces, nosebleeds, blood in the faeces, bloody urine, bleeding gums, excessive vaginal bleeding, bruising, prolonged bleeding after surgery or trauma, blood loss anemia. The inheritance of the severe forms (Types II and III) is autosomal recessive. The milder form (Type I) may be autosomal recessive or incompletely dominant. This is the most common hereditary blood clotting disorder in dogs.
Published
Kramer, JW., Venta, PJ., Klein, SR., Cao, Y., Schall, WD., Yuzbasiyan-Gurkan, V. : A von Willebrand's factor genomic nucleotide variant and polymerase chain reaction diagnostic test associated with inheritable type-2 von Willebrand's disease in a line of german shorthaired pointer dogs. Vet Pathol 41:221-8, 2004. Pubmed reference: 15133170. DOI: 10.1354/vp.41-3-221.
Published 2
Nichols, T.C., Hough, C., Agerso¸, H., Ezban, M., Lillicrap, D. : Canine models of inherited bleeding disorders in the development of coagulation assays, novel protein replacement and gene therapies. J Thromb Haemost 14:894-905, 2016. Pubmed reference: 26924758. DOI: 10.1111/jth.13301.
Published 3
Donner, J., Kaukonen, M., Anderson, H., Móller, F., Kyóstilä, K., Sankari, S., Hytónen, M., Giger, U., Lohi, H. : Genetic Panel Screening of Nearly 100 Mutations Reveals New Insights into the Breed Di
Body/System/Process
Blood
OMIA Url
Inheritance
AR
Breed Specific Info
Researched Breeds
Chinese Crested Dog, German Shorthair Pointer, German Wirehaired Pointer