I have heard of it horses and could happen in any animal. But the reason would be there is a hormone issue that was going on for her to be repeatedly in heat and at such a young age. What was causing it, hard to say.
But now that she is spayed, hopefully she will not show signs of heat again.
A spay usually just involves removing the uterus not the ovaries. The ovaries and the pituitary gland produces certain female hormones. There may possibly be issues with the ovaries and/or pituitary gland.
I would wait and see but if you see signs of false heats I would try to find a good reproduction Vet taht might be more familiar this kind of situation. |