Pages

Monday, 14 April 2008

Burmilla Health

Burmilla Health - As mentioned in the post on the history and origins of this cat breed, the Burmilla's founding cats are the Burmese and Persian (Chinchilla coat). The Persian cat breed is known to suffer from a number of disorders including the genetic disorder PKD - Polycystic Kidney Disease (apparently about one third of all purebred Persians contract PKD).


PKD

This disease is nasty. Cysts form in the kidneys. It can lead to renal failure, which kills as you might expect.

Accordingly, the Burmilla may have inherited this disease. Good breeders will screen for it by DNA testing. This ensures as near as possible that the breeding program operated by the breeder is free of this disease. Enquire about this with the breeder. They should have medical documentation certifying that their cats are free of PKD.


Genetic Defect USA Burmese

As for the Burmese cat the other founding parent cat of the Burmilla, it might be useful to mention that the USA Burmese carries a genetic defect that occasionally rears its ugly head in the form of the birth of kittens with deformed heads - quite tragic really. These kittens are killed. I do not know how this gene is or isn't transmitted to the Burmilla. It is probably transmitted but is recessive so is rarely seen. I'd ask about and watch for this as well, though. This disorder does not affect UK Burmese cats apparently.

Burmilla Health to Home Page

2 comments:

  1. US Burmese have never been used in developing the Burmilla and other Asian varieties, so there is no incidence of the head defect in the breed. There have been no US Burmese imported to the UK since the 1970s, well prior to the appearance of the head defect.

    There is also no incidence of PKD in GCCF registered UK Burmillas - since 2001, Chinchillas have not been permitted in the breeding programme in any case.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete

Your comments are always welcome.