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Dog DNA Test Result Interpreter Calculator

Suyash Dhoot by Suyash Dhoot
26 May 2026
in Calculator, Wellness
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Dog DNA Test Result Interpreter Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

Dog DNA Test Result Interpreter Calculator

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Embark / Wisdom Panel
Dog DNA Test Result Interpreter
Breed composition + health markers translation
Just got Embark, Wisdom Panel, Royal Canin, or other DNA test results back? Enter the breed percentages and health markers to get personalized interpretation – what each breed means for your dog’s health, behavior, exercise needs, and what to discuss with your vet about the specific genetic markers reported.
Health markers reported by DNA test (tick all that apply)
DNA test interpretation framework. Modern DNA tests provide breed composition estimates and health/trait markers. Results indicate PREDISPOSITION not certain disease development. Discuss specific findings with your vet for personalized recommendations. MDR1 status is CRITICAL for any sedation/anaesthesia – alert your vet.

Understanding Your Dog’s DNA Test Results

You just got your dog’s DNA test results back from Embark, Wisdom Panel, Royal Canin Genetic Health Analysis, or similar service. Now what?

This calculator helps you interpret:

  • Breed composition — what each breed means for your dog
  • Health markers — the specific mutations tested
  • Behavioral implications — what to expect based on breed mix
  • Medical considerations — what to discuss with your vet
  • Care recommendations — personalized to your dog’s genetic profile

How DNA Tests Work

Modern canine DNA tests sequence specific regions of your dog’s genome:

Breed Composition

  • Compares your dog’s DNA to reference breed databases (Embark uses 350+ breeds; Wisdom Panel similar)
  • >95% accuracy for clearly identifiable breeds in newer tests
  • Less accurate for ancient breeds, rare landraces, or village dogs
  • Percentages reflect SHARED DNA with reference breeds, NOT pedigree percentages

Health/Trait Markers

  • Tests for specific known mutations (~150-200+ depending on test)
  • Identifies PREDISPOSITION not certain disease development
  • Some markers are breed-specific (e.g., Collie eye, EIC in Labs)
  • Others are broadly relevant (MDR1, DM SOD1)

What Breed Percentages Mean

Important distinction: A “50% Labrador” result doesn’t necessarily mean one purebred Lab parent. It could be:

  • 1 purebred Lab parent + 1 mixed parent
  • Multiple Lab ancestors over generations
  • 2 partially-Lab mixed parents

Percentages reflect SHARED DNA with reference breeds, not pedigree.

Mixed Breeds Often Healthier

Hybrid vigor generally favors mixed breeds:

  • More genetic diversity = less inbreeding
  • Fewer extreme health predispositions than purebreds
  • Breed-specific diseases diluted in mixes
  • Some pure breed traits moderated

A 25% Bulldog mix may have LESS SEVERE brachycephalic features than purebred Bulldog. A 50% Cavalier mix may have lower MMVD risk than purebred Cavalier.

Key Health Markers Explained

MDR1 (Multi-Drug Resistance) – ABCB1 Mutation

Most clinically important marker to share with vet.

Affects: Border Collie, Australian Shepherd, Collie (Rough/Smooth), Shetland Sheepdog, Old English Sheepdog, English Shepherd, Longhaired Whippet, Silken Windhound, some German Shepherds.

Drugs requiring caution:

  • Acepromazine — reduce dose 50-75%
  • Butorphanol — lower doses
  • High-dose ivermectin — NOT for parasites (standard heartworm doses SAFE)
  • Some chemotherapy (vincristine, doxorubicin)
  • Loperamide (Imodium) — AVOID
  • Some opioids

Critical: ALERT VET to MDR1 status before ANY sedation, anaesthesia, or chemotherapy.

Homozygous (mut/mut) dogs more severely affected than heterozygous (mut/n) carriers.

See PuppaDogs Ivermectin Calculator and Anaesthesia Recovery Calculator.

DM (Degenerative Myelopathy) – SOD1 Mutation

Adult-onset progressive paralysis similar to ALS in humans.

Most common in: German Shepherd, Boxer, Bernese Mountain Dog, Welsh Corgi, Chesapeake Bay Retriever.

Progression:

  • Onset 8-10+ years
  • Hindlimb weakness first
  • Gradual progression to paralysis over 6-36 months
  • No specific treatment currently

Result interpretation:

  • Homozygous (mut/mut) — at risk; ~10-20% develop clinical DM
  • Heterozygous (mut/n) — carrier; typically unaffected
  • Both have reproductive implications for breeders

Care for affected dogs: physiotherapy, hydrotherapy, mobility support, careful diagnosis (rule out other neuro causes).

vWD (von Willebrand Disease)

Bleeding disorder — factor VIII deficiency.

Breeds: Doberman, Scottish Terrier, Shetland Sheepdog, German Shorthaired Pointer, German Wirehaired Pointer, Standard Poodle.

Three types:

  • Type 1 — mild deficiency (most common; Doberman)
  • Type 2 — moderate
  • Type 3 — severe (rare)

Critical: ALERT VET before ANY elective surgery.

Pre-operative:

  • Buccal mucosal bleeding time or vWF antigen testing
  • Desmopressin may be given pre-op to boost factor levels
  • AVOID NSAIDs/aspirin when possible
  • Type 3 dogs need plasma transfusion availability

Hyperuricosuria

Predisposes to urate bladder/kidney stones.

Most affected: Dalmatian (often 100%), some Bulldog and Mastiff lines.

Management:

  • Low-purine diet (avoid organ meats, anchovies, sardines, mussels)
  • Increased water intake to dilute urine
  • Some require allopurinol medication
  • Monitor urinary pH

Collie Eye Anomaly (CEA)

Inherited eye condition in Collies, Aussies, Shelties.

Severity ranges:

  • Most mildly affected dogs maintain normal vision
  • Severely affected may have visual impairment
  • Some progression possible

Recommendation: ophthalmologic eye exam in affected breeds.

Exercise-Induced Collapse (EIC)

Affected dogs collapse during high-intensity exercise — especially Labradors.

Management:

  • Avoid hot weather + sustained intense exercise
  • Rest breaks during activity
  • Carry water
  • Symptoms resolve in 10-30 minutes rest
  • Not life-threatening if recognized

Progressive Retinal Atrophy (PRA)

Late-onset blindness — affected dogs gradually lose vision typically starting 5-7 years.

Many breeds affected (different forms): Cocker, Labrador, Poodle, Collie, etc.

No specific treatment but dogs adapt well to gradual vision loss. Antioxidant supplements (Ocu-GLO) may slow progression.

Subaortic Stenosis (SAS)

Cardiac obstruction risk.

Recommendation: cardiac evaluation by veterinary cardiologist.

Severe cases: sudden cardiac death risk; beta-blocker therapy for symptomatic dogs.

Breed-Specific Health Implications

Each breed in your dog’s mix may contribute predispositions:

Common Predispositions By Breed

BreedKey health concerns
LabradorHip/elbow dysplasia, obesity, EIC, cataracts
Golden RetrieverCancer (high lifetime), hip/elbow, heart, hypothyroid
German ShepherdHip dysplasia, DM, EPI, bloat, allergies
Bulldog (English)BOAS, hip dysplasia, skin folds, cherry eye, heat
French BulldogBOAS, IVDD, hemivertebrae, allergies
BoxerCardiac, cancer, hip dysplasia, BOAS, allergies
BeagleIVDD, obesity, hypothyroid, ear infections, epilepsy
Yorkshire TerrierPatellar luxation, tracheal collapse, PSS, dental
DachshundIVDD (highest risk), obesity, patellar luxation
ChihuahuaPatellar luxation, tracheal collapse, dental, hydrocephalus
HuskyHip dysplasia, eye conditions, hypothyroid, zinc-responsive dermatosis
RottweilerCancer, hip/elbow dysplasia, cardiac, bloat
Border CollieHip dysplasia, CEA, epilepsy, MDR1 (some lines), TNS
Australian ShepherdMDR1 (common), hip dysplasia, CEA, epilepsy
Cocker SpanielEar infections, eye conditions, hip dysplasia, heart, IMHA
Shih TzuBOAS, eye, hip dysplasia, allergies, dental
Great DaneBloat (very high), hip/elbow, DCM, wobbler, short lifespan
Cavalier KCSMMVD (>90% by 10), syringomyelia, hip dysplasia, eye
DobermanDCM, wobbler, vWD, hypothyroid
Pit Bull / AmStaffHip dysplasia, allergies, demodicosis, hypothyroid

What To Do With DNA Test Results

1. Share With Your Vet

Bring printed results to next appointment:

  • Discuss breed-specific screening appropriate to your dog
  • Note ANY medication-relevant markers (MDR1, vWD especially)
  • Update vet records with key findings

2. Tailor Preventive Care

Examples:

  • High hip dysplasia risk breeds — consider OFA hip X-rays at 2 years
  • Cardiac-predisposed breeds — echocardiogram screening
  • Eye-predisposed breeds — ophthalmology exam
  • Hyperuricosuria — low-purine diet
  • DCM-prone breeds — switch to grain-inclusive AAFCO diet (FDA recommendation)

3. Medication Caution

Critical alerts:

  • MDR1 positive — alert any vet/specialist; pet insurance forms note
  • vWD positive — pre-op clotting tests
  • DM SOD1 — neurological monitoring as ages

4. Pet Insurance

Consider pet insurance especially for breed-predisposed conditions:

  • Some insurers exclude breed-specific conditions
  • Pre-existing conditions clause — get insurance BEFORE diagnosis
  • Breed-predisposed conditions like MMVD in Cavalier benefit from coverage

5. Breeding Decisions (If Applicable)

Some markers warrant not breeding:

  • vWD positive — bleeding risk in offspring
  • Severe CEA — vision loss in puppies
  • DM homozygous — late-life disease risk

Carriers can sometimes be bred to non-carriers safely depending on the mutation.

Common DNA Test Products

Embark Veterinary

  • 350+ breeds in reference
  • 210+ health markers
  • Trait markers (coat, size, etc.)
  • Family tree (sometimes finds relatives in their database!)
  • $129-189 depending on package
  • Most comprehensive for breed identification

Wisdom Panel

  • 350+ breeds in reference
  • 240+ health markers
  • Trait markers
  • Royal Canin partnership — links to breed-specific food recommendations
  • $84-159 depending on package
  • Strong for genetic health

Royal Canin Genetic Health Analysis

  • Smaller breed database
  • Strong health focus
  • Tied to Royal Canin recommendations

DNA My Dog

  • Cheaper option ($60-90)
  • Less comprehensive breed database
  • More limited health markers

Honest Caveats

  • Breed percentages are estimates — not pedigree certainty
  • Accuracy varies with breed (common breeds better identified than rare/landrace)
  • Health markers indicate predisposition, not certain disease development
  • Some markers common in many dogs without clinical disease
  • Genetic ≠ destiny — environment, diet, exercise, care matter enormously
  • Don’t over-interpret — mixed breed dogs often healthier than purebreds
  • Behavior even more variable than health — individual personality matters

Conclusion

Canine DNA tests (Embark, Wisdom Panel, Royal Canin, DNA My Dog) provide breed composition and health markers that help personalize your dog’s care. Breed percentages reflect shared DNA with reference breeds, not pedigree — and mixed breeds often have moderated health predispositions due to genetic diversity. Key health markers to share with vet: MDR1 (anaesthesia/medication critical), vWD (pre-op clotting), DM SOD1 (late-life paralysis risk), hyperuricosuria (urate stones diet), CEA, EIC, PRA. Breed-specific screening tailored to identified breeds (hip X-rays, cardiac exam, eye exam, breed-specific blood work). Pet insurance beneficial for breed-predisposed conditions — get coverage BEFORE diagnosis as pre-existing conditions excluded. Genetic results are predisposition, not destiny — environment, diet, exercise, training, and care all matter substantially.

Frequently Asked Questions

How accurate are dog DNA tests?

MODERN TESTS (Embark, Wisdom Panel) accuracy >95% for clearly identifiable breeds; less accurate for ancient breeds, rare landrace breeds, or village dogs. BREED COMPOSITION percentages reflect SHARED DNA with reference breeds, not pedigree percentages – a ‘50% Lab’ result could mean 1 purebred Lab parent OR multiple Lab ancestors over generations. HEALTH MARKERS test for specific known mutations (~150-200+ depending on test) – results indicate PREDISPOSITION not certain disease development. ACCURACY CHECKS – look for tests offering >95% confidence intervals; Embark has largest reference database (350+ breeds); Wisdom Panel similar. CHEAPER tests (DNA My Dog) less accurate breed database, more limited health markers. RESULTS are starting point for vet conversation, not diagnosis.

What is MDR1 mutation in dogs?

MDR1 (Multi-Drug Resistance) = ABCB1 gene mutation affecting blood-brain barrier drug transport. AFFECTED BREEDS: Border Collie, Australian Shepherd, Collie (Rough/Smooth), Shetland Sheepdog, Old English Sheepdog, English Shepherd, Longhaired Whippet, Silken Windhound, some German Shepherds, Long-Haired Whippet. AFFECTED dogs get PROLONGED CNS EFFECTS from certain drugs at standard doses. DRUGS REQUIRING CAUTION: ACEPROMAZINE (reduce dose 50-75%); BUTORPHANOL (lower doses); HIGH-DOSE IVERMECTIN (for parasites – standard heartworm doses SAFE); some CHEMOTHERAPY (vincristine, doxorubicin); LOPERAMIDE/Imodium (AVOID); some OPIOIDS. CRITICAL – ALERT VET to MDR1 status before any sedation/anaesthesia/chemotherapy. HOMOZYGOUS (mut/mut) more severely affected than heterozygous (mut/n) carriers. Standard heartworm doses are SAFE.

Should I trust the breed percentages from a DNA test?

MOSTLY YES but understand limitations. BREED COMPOSITION reflects SHARED DNA with reference breeds, NOT pedigree percentages. A ‘50% Lab’ result could mean: 1 purebred Lab parent + 1 mixed mother; OR multiple Lab ancestors over generations; OR 2 partially-Lab mixed parents. PERCENTAGES MOST RELIABLE for CLEARLY IDENTIFIABLE COMMON BREEDS (Lab, Golden, German Shepherd, Bulldog, Poodle – >95% accuracy in newer tests). LESS RELIABLE for ANCIENT BREEDS, RARE LANDRACES (street dogs, primitive breeds), MIXED MIXES (when many breeds in low percentages). ‘OTHER BREEDS/MIXED’ category often appears when breeds don’t match reference database. TRUST percentages as GENERAL GUIDANCE for health predispositions and exercise needs – not exact pedigree certainty.

What is DM degenerative myelopathy in dogs?

DEGENERATIVE MYELOPATHY (DM) = late-onset progressive PARALYSIS caused by SOD1 gene mutation – similar to ALS in humans. MOST COMMON IN: German Shepherd, Boxer, Bernese Mountain Dog, Welsh Corgi (Pembroke and Cardigan), Chesapeake Bay Retriever. PROGRESSION: onset 8-10+ years; hindlimb weakness/wobble first; gradual progression to paralysis over 6-36 months; affects forelimbs eventually; bladder/bowel function lost late in disease. NO SPECIFIC TREATMENT currently – palliative care only. RESULT INTERPRETATION: HOMOZYGOUS (mut/mut) at risk – about 10-20% develop clinical DM; HETEROZYGOUS (mut/n) carrier typically unaffected; both have reproductive implications. CARE FOR AFFECTED – physiotherapy, hydrotherapy, mobility aids, careful diagnosis (rule out IVDD, spinal tumors, other myelopathies with MRI). Diagnosis usually clinical progression in absence of other findings.

Does my mixed breed dog have less health problems?

GENERALLY YES due to HYBRID VIGOR (heterosis). MIXED BREEDS often have: GREATER GENETIC DIVERSITY = less inbreeding; FEWER EXTREME HEALTH PREDISPOSITIONS than purebreds; BREED-SPECIFIC DISEASES diluted in mixes (25% Bulldog mix less brachycephalic than purebred); COMMON BREED-CANCER RATES lower; LONGER AVERAGE LIFESPAN than equivalent purebred. EXCEPTIONS: if mix has TWO breeds both predisposed to same condition, risk maintained (e.g., Lab x Golden = hip dysplasia + cancer risk); SPECIFIC GENETIC MARKERS (MDR1, DM, vWD) inherited regardless of mix; OVER-REPRESENTED breed traits (extreme brachycephalic, dwarfism) still problematic. OVERALL – mixed breeds typically have FEWER extreme purebred health predispositions but individual variation substantial. Genetic diversity is the best protection.

Can I breed my DNA-tested dog?

DEPENDS on findings. SHOULD NOT BE BRED if: SEVERE GENETIC HEALTH MARKERS (severe vWD type 3, certain progressive disease alleles homozygous); STRUCTURAL HEALTH ISSUES (severe hip dysplasia OFA Excellent rating preferred for breeding); BREED REGISTRY DISQUALIFIERS. CARRIER STATUS often acceptable to breed but with informed pairing: vWD CARRIER bred to non-carrier; DM CARRIER (heterozygous) similarly bred to non-carrier – this prevents homozygous affected offspring while preserving genetic diversity. RESPONSIBLE BREEDING – test ALL prospective parents; AVOID PAIRINGS where both carry SAME mutations; CONSULT BREEDER OR VETERINARY GENETICIST for complex decisions; HEALTH-TEST OFFSPRING. Many responsible breeders use DNA testing to make scientifically-informed breeding decisions. If your dog has significant health markers, discuss with reputable breeder organization for your specific breed.

DNA Test Follow-Up Products

After getting your dog’s DNA test results, these products help address breed-specific needs – joint support for predisposed breeds, ID tags, MDR1 alerts.

Medical Alert ID Tag (Note MDR1 / vWD)Medical Alert ID Tag (Note MDR1 / vWD)
GoTags
Custom-engraved tag noting any DNA test findings – especially MDR1 status critical for vet emergencies.
View on Amazon →
Nutramax Cosequin DS Plus MSMNutramax Cosequin DS Plus MSM
Nutramax
Joint support if DNA test shows hip/elbow dysplasia-prone breeds (Lab, Golden, GSD, Rottweiler).
View on Amazon →
Nutramax Denamarin Tablets 225mgNutramax Denamarin Tablets 225mg
Nutramax
Liver support if DNA reveals copper-storage hepatopathy-prone breeds (Bedlington, Westie).
View on Amazon →
Nordic Naturals Pet Cod Liver OilNordic Naturals Pet Cod Liver Oil
Nordic Naturals
Omega-3 universal benefits – supports any breed predisposition (joint, skin, heart, brain).
View on Amazon →
Ocu-GLO Vision SupplementOcu-GLO Vision Supplement
Animal Necessity
Eye support if DNA shows PRA/CEA breeds (Cocker, Lab, Collie, Aussie).
View on Amazon →
Adaptil Calming DiffuserAdaptil Calming Diffuser
Adaptil
Anxiety support for high-energy/anxiety-prone breeds (Border Collie, Aussie, Cavalier).
View on Amazon →
Affiliate disclosure: PuppaDogs is an Amazon Services LLC Associates Program participant. We may earn commission on qualifying Amazon purchases at no additional cost to you. Product recommendations are based on evidence quality and reputation, not commission. Always discuss new supplements or treatments with your veterinarian.

Related PuppaDogs Calculators

Continue building your dog’s personalised care plan with these related PuppaDogs calculators:

  • Dog Pregnancy / Whelping Due-Date Calculator
  • Puppy Weight Predictor (Adult Weight Calculator)
  • Heatstroke Risk Calculator for Dogs
  • Bloat (GDV) Risk Calculator for Dogs
  • Dog Life Expectancy Calculator (Breed, Body Condition, Lifestyle)
  • Spay/Neuter Timing Calculator for Dogs (Breed-Specific)

References & Further Reading

The dosing ranges and safety information on this page are drawn from the following veterinary references. Always defer to your own veterinarian and the manufacturer’s label for your specific product.

  1. Mealey KL. Therapeutic implications of the MDR-1 gene. Journal of Veterinary Pharmacology and Therapeutics.
  2. Coates JR, Wininger FA. Canine degenerative myelopathy. Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice.
  3. Boudreaux MK. Inherited platelet disorders. Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care.
  4. Bannasch D, Safra N, Young A, et al. Mutations in the SLC2A9 gene cause hyperuricosuria and hyperuricemia in the dog. PLOS Genetics.
  5. Embark Veterinary DNA test product information – embarkvet.com.
  6. Wisdom Panel DNA test product information – wisdompanel.com.
  7. Royal Canin Genetic Health Analysis.
  8. Washington State University Veterinary Clinical Pharmacology Laboratory – vcpl.vetmed.wsu.edu (MDR1 reference).
  9. PuppaDogs. Ivermectin Calculator, Anaesthesia Recovery Calculator, MDR1 breed-specific notes throughout. puppadogs.com.
Suyash Dhoot
Suyash Dhoot
Tags: DM SOD1 mutationdog DNA testdog genetic healthEmbark resultsMDR1 mutationWisdom Panel interpretation
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