Cavalier Heart
Disease, Causes & Cures...
A FUND FORMED TO FIGHT CHRONIC
VALVULAR DISEASE
The Darcy Fund has been created to finance
research into the causes and cures of chronic valvular disease, the most
common form of heart disease affecting dogs. Named for Darcy, a six-year
old tricolor Cavalier King Charles Spaniel who succumbed to the disease
on June 27, 2006, the fund was set up by Darcy's owners, Kim and Jerry
Thornton of Lake Forest, California, in conjunction with The American
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel Charitable Trust, a 501 (c) (3)
organization formed in 2002 for the protection of the health of the
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel.
While the Darcy Fund is aimed at Cavaliers, any
discoveries it helps to fund have the potential to benefit all dogs.
Approximately 11 percent of the dogs seen by veterinarians have some
form of heart disease, says John Rush, DVM, a board certified
cardiologist at Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts
University in Grafton, Massachusetts. Of those dogs, 75 to 80 percent
have CVD.
Small and medium size dogs that are middle-aged
or older are most commonly affected, with Cavalier King Charles Spaniels
and Dachshunds having the greatest incidence of CVD. Chihuahuas, Poodles
and Papillons are also prone to CVD, but any dog has the potential to
develop it.
Tax-deductible donations to the Darcy Fund may
be made through the ACKCSC Charitable Trust at
http://ackcsccharitabletrust.org/donations.htm . Note that the
donation is for the Darcy Fund and any such noted donations will be
credited to it. In the words of Joanne Nash, a Cavalier breeder and
friend of Darcy, "Maybe some day dogs like Darcy will have a chance to
live longer, healthier lives."
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