Plan of action The best ancillary test is to take pelvic radiographs, focusing on both coxo-femoral joints. To confirm or deny hypothesis 3 of traumatic insult, the owners may provide more information by answering questions such as: is the house carpeted? Are the stairs carpeted? Are there several wires or cords on the floor? Are the childrenÕs toys lying around? Does the dog tend to be clumsy? For how much of the day is the dog at home alone? Is the dog allowed free access to the entire house including the steps? Radiographs should also make any fractures or soft tissue swelling in the joint area evident. Hypothesis 2 can almost be eliminated based on the research and clinical signs already presented. Other forms of non-septic arthritis, including canine SLE associated arthritis, idiopathic non-deforming arthritis, and chronic infectious disease, all result in polyarthritis, especially in smaller joints, and have other physical findings including anorexia and lymphadenopathy which do not apply here. Canine Rheumatoid Arthritis is more common in small and toy breed dogs, usually involves all joints, especially smaller, more distal joints, causing shifting lameness, anorexia, muscle atrophy, cyclic fever, and generalized lymphadenopathy, so this condition, too, is unlikely to warrant further expensive, unnecessary testing in this patient. Since osteoarthritis is typically accompanied by clinical signs including joint swelling, fibrosis, effusion, crepitus, and muscle atrophy, which are not evident in this patient, the clinical history and physical exam do not support the hypothesis. To confirm or eliminate this hypothesis, the owner could be asked further questions for a more complete description of the events surrounding the onset of clinical signs. Was there and opportunity for the patient to sustain trauma without the owner noticing? Such a trauma would make osteoarthritis (and hypothesis 3) a greater consideration. The radiographs will also reveal formation of new joint margins, joint space narrowing, and subchondral bone sclerosis and remodeling (including fissures) characteristic of osteoarthritis. Our most likely hypothesis is number 1. Hip displasia can be diagnosed based on radiographic examination under general anesthesia with proper positioning to include the entire pelvis and stifles. While the patient is under anesthesia, OrtelaniÕs sign should be evaluated on the right hip to evaluate range of motion. According to the University of Pennsylvania hip improvement program, PennHIP views measure and interpret hip joint laxity with three separate radiographs: distraction view, compression view, and hip extension view. Hip dysplasia will show an obvious contrast between the distraction and hip extension views. The compression view estimates how well the femoral head fits into the acetabulum.