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Afibrinogenemia (AFG)

General description

Typical signs of bleeding disorders are prolonged clotting time, cord or mucosal bleeding and haematomas. They can lead to uncontrolled severe bleeding upon surgeries, injuries or spontaneous. In Dachshunds, a genetic variant of the FGA (fibrinogen alpha chain) gene has been found to be associated with afibrinogenemia, leading to a severe form of bleeding tendency.

Breeds

Dachshund (Dackel), Long-Haired Dachshund, Short-Haired Dachshund, Wire-Haired Dachshund

Order details
Test number8737
AbbreviationAFG
Sample material0.5 ml EDTA blood, 2x cheek swab, 1x special swab (eNAT)
Test duration7-14 working days
Test specifications
Symptom complexhematologic
Inheritanceautosomal recessive
Causalitycausally
GeneFGA
MutationDEL
LiteratureOMIA:002382-9615
Detailed description

Typical signs of bleeding disorders are prolonged clotting time, cord or mucosal bleeding and haematomas. They can lead to uncontrolled severe bleeding upon surgeries, injuries or spontaneous.
In Dachshunds, a genetic variant of the FGA (fibrinogen alpha chain) gene has been found to be associated with afibrinogenemia, leading to a severe form of bleeding tendency. Afibrinogenemia is characterized by the absence of coagulation factor I (fibrinogen), a glycoprotein with a central role in the final step of coagulation cascade in hemostasis. Affected dogs show extremely prolonged clotting times at different coagulation tests (PT, aPTT, TT), normal activities of factors II, V, VII and X, and normal platelet counts.