View Single Post
Old 02-26-2015, 02:59 PM   #48
ladyjane
Resident Yorkie Nut Donating YT 20K Club Member
 
ladyjane's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Texas
Posts: 27,490
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by gemy View Post
That is quite true about the delayed closure of the growth plates.


I think that dogs just like humans are part of the same genus, and there is value to looking to large or medium breed studies for many conditions. Certainly hormones tend to act very similarly across all sizes of dogs. And an internal organ is an internal organ in all sizes of dogs.
But for osteopathic conditions it seems logical to conclude osteo configuration problems are more severely felt by large breed dogs. In fact they can be life - threatening - and certainly have severe quality of life implications.


And a Mammary Gland is the same Mammary Gland across all breeds of dogs - and there is no grand increase in this cancer with delaying a spay for one or two heats. The often quoted statistics are quite wrong - cancer mammary does not increase to 8% after even spaying after second heat. I will need to look up once again the often mis-understood and quoted study - but first only 50% of all mammary tumors are cancerous - and 50% are benign. Cancer risk does increase very very slightly after delaying one or two heats - the increase might be 8% on the .01% spaying before first heat. That means the increase is measured like this .01% goes up by 8% for simplicity at 10% increase the incident rate would go from 1% to 1.10% - a really really neglibile factor.
But there IS an increase .. For me, I prefer NO risk at all. 50% are cancerous...enough for me.

I am not a breeder and there is no reason for me to have intact dogs in my home. My dogs are in great shape and I don't for one minute buy into this whole thing about the growth plates. Maybe there is some slight difference, but it is obvious to me that it is not a huge one. I will continue to spay before the first heat. I will not put my dogs at any risk of cancer that can be avoided....that information is backed by research.

For anyone else, I would hope you would speak with your vet and get his/her feedback on this topic.
ladyjane is offline   Reply With Quote
Welcome Guest!
Not Registered?

Join today and remove this ad!