The Nature of Coxofemoral Joint Pathology Across Family Canidae

We evaluated coxofemoral joints from museum specimens of: Vulpes lagopus; Vulpes vulpes; Vulpes velox; Nyctereutes procyonoides; Urocyon cinereoargenteus; Aenocyon [Canis] dirus; Canis latrans; Canis lupus lupus; Canis lupus familiaris; C. l. familiaris × latrans; and Canis dingo. Acetabular compone...

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Published in:The Anatomical Record
Main Authors: Lawler, Dennis, Tangredi, Basil, Becker, Julia, Widga, Christopher, Etnier, Michael, Martin, Terrance, Schulz, Kurt, Kohn, Luci
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works-2/408
https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.24846
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spelling fteasttennesseeu:oai:dc.etsu.edu:etsu-works-2-1407 2023-07-30T04:02:49+02:00 The Nature of Coxofemoral Joint Pathology Across Family Canidae Lawler, Dennis Tangredi, Basil Becker, Julia Widga, Christopher Etnier, Michael Martin, Terrance Schulz, Kurt Kohn, Luci 2021-11-26T08:00:00Z https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works-2/408 https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.24846 unknown Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works-2/408 doi:10.1002/ar.24846 https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.24846 ETSU Faculty Works canidae bone development bone growth coxofemoral joint osteoarthropathy text 2021 fteasttennesseeu https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.24846 2023-07-15T18:48:56Z We evaluated coxofemoral joints from museum specimens of: Vulpes lagopus; Vulpes vulpes; Vulpes velox; Nyctereutes procyonoides; Urocyon cinereoargenteus; Aenocyon [Canis] dirus; Canis latrans; Canis lupus lupus; Canis lupus familiaris; C. l. familiaris × latrans; and Canis dingo. Acetabular components included: fossa; articular surface; medial and lateral articular margins; and periarticular surfaces. Acetabular components variably revealed: osteophyte-like features; varying appearance of articular margin rims (especially contour changes); rough bone surfaces (especially fossa and articular surface); and surface wear. Proximal femoral components included: articular surface; articular margin; periarticular surfaces; and joint capsule attachment. Femoral components variably revealed: rough bone surface; bone loss; articular margin osteophyte-like features; caudal post-developmental mineralized prominence; and enthesophytes along the joint capsule attachment. Non-metric multidimensional scaling was used to analyze right-left asymmetric relationships between observed traits, across taxa. Significantly different acetabular trait asymmetry involved only C. latrans-C. l. familiaris; V. vulpes-N. procyonoides, and U. cinereoargenteus-N. procyonoides. There were no significant lateralized differences in proximal femoral traits involving modern canids, ancient and modern C. l. familiaris, or modern vulpines. Thus, the observations were strongly bilateral. We hypothesized high similarity of traits across taxa. The data confirm the hypothesis and strongly suggest broad and deep morphological and mechanistic conservation that almost certainly pre-existed (at least) all modern canids. Further zoological studies are needed to evaluate phylogenic implications in greater detail. Text Canis lupus Vulpes lagopus Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University Fossa ENVELOPE(9.795,9.795,62.990,62.990) The Anatomical Record 305 9 2119 2136
institution Open Polar
collection Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
op_collection_id fteasttennesseeu
language unknown
topic canidae
bone development
bone growth
coxofemoral joint
osteoarthropathy
spellingShingle canidae
bone development
bone growth
coxofemoral joint
osteoarthropathy
Lawler, Dennis
Tangredi, Basil
Becker, Julia
Widga, Christopher
Etnier, Michael
Martin, Terrance
Schulz, Kurt
Kohn, Luci
The Nature of Coxofemoral Joint Pathology Across Family Canidae
topic_facet canidae
bone development
bone growth
coxofemoral joint
osteoarthropathy
description We evaluated coxofemoral joints from museum specimens of: Vulpes lagopus; Vulpes vulpes; Vulpes velox; Nyctereutes procyonoides; Urocyon cinereoargenteus; Aenocyon [Canis] dirus; Canis latrans; Canis lupus lupus; Canis lupus familiaris; C. l. familiaris × latrans; and Canis dingo. Acetabular components included: fossa; articular surface; medial and lateral articular margins; and periarticular surfaces. Acetabular components variably revealed: osteophyte-like features; varying appearance of articular margin rims (especially contour changes); rough bone surfaces (especially fossa and articular surface); and surface wear. Proximal femoral components included: articular surface; articular margin; periarticular surfaces; and joint capsule attachment. Femoral components variably revealed: rough bone surface; bone loss; articular margin osteophyte-like features; caudal post-developmental mineralized prominence; and enthesophytes along the joint capsule attachment. Non-metric multidimensional scaling was used to analyze right-left asymmetric relationships between observed traits, across taxa. Significantly different acetabular trait asymmetry involved only C. latrans-C. l. familiaris; V. vulpes-N. procyonoides, and U. cinereoargenteus-N. procyonoides. There were no significant lateralized differences in proximal femoral traits involving modern canids, ancient and modern C. l. familiaris, or modern vulpines. Thus, the observations were strongly bilateral. We hypothesized high similarity of traits across taxa. The data confirm the hypothesis and strongly suggest broad and deep morphological and mechanistic conservation that almost certainly pre-existed (at least) all modern canids. Further zoological studies are needed to evaluate phylogenic implications in greater detail.
format Text
author Lawler, Dennis
Tangredi, Basil
Becker, Julia
Widga, Christopher
Etnier, Michael
Martin, Terrance
Schulz, Kurt
Kohn, Luci
author_facet Lawler, Dennis
Tangredi, Basil
Becker, Julia
Widga, Christopher
Etnier, Michael
Martin, Terrance
Schulz, Kurt
Kohn, Luci
author_sort Lawler, Dennis
title The Nature of Coxofemoral Joint Pathology Across Family Canidae
title_short The Nature of Coxofemoral Joint Pathology Across Family Canidae
title_full The Nature of Coxofemoral Joint Pathology Across Family Canidae
title_fullStr The Nature of Coxofemoral Joint Pathology Across Family Canidae
title_full_unstemmed The Nature of Coxofemoral Joint Pathology Across Family Canidae
title_sort nature of coxofemoral joint pathology across family canidae
publisher Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
publishDate 2021
url https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works-2/408
https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.24846
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.795,9.795,62.990,62.990)
geographic Fossa
geographic_facet Fossa
genre Canis lupus
Vulpes lagopus
genre_facet Canis lupus
Vulpes lagopus
op_source ETSU Faculty Works
op_relation https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works-2/408
doi:10.1002/ar.24846
https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.24846
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.24846
container_title The Anatomical Record
container_volume 305
container_issue 9
container_start_page 2119
op_container_end_page 2136
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