As a responsible breeder, I would make every effort to let someone know if there was a possibility that they might suffer through the affects of malocclusion.
This subject makes me mad sometimes, because some breeders take chances.
I purchased a new chin last year, and with in a couple of months the breeder contacted me to tell me not to breed him. His grandfather had maloccuded, so his Dad was taken out too.
The thing is some say the defect has to come from both sides to effect the kits, so another breeder who has the another off spring says she will continue to breed him with a better quality chin with no malocclusion in it's back ground.
I think that's taking chances, and I have seen them so sick with this that I wouldn't take any chances and will not breed the one I bought for anything.
How many chins are out there that are carriers?
? How could you tell?
He cost me a fine sum,a beautiful tov ebony, then I had to pay to have him shipped in.
The breeder will replace him but I still have to pay for the flight. As it's just as cheap to ship 4 as one, I haven't even taken her up on it yet.
We have to stop this gene in it's tracks and the only way is not to breed any chin that any relative has maloccluded.
It's us small hobby pet breeders that need to be more responsible about what chins we breed.
Bad coloring or poor quality fur is one thing, but maloclusions is a death sentence with so much pain & heart ache.