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![]() | #286 | |
Donating YT 10K Club Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: S. W. Suburbs of Chicago, IL
Posts: 12,235
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__________________ “Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference.” ![]() | |
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![]() | #287 |
T. Bumpkins & Co. Donating YT Member Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: New England
Posts: 9,816
| ![]() Yes he has his resume on his FAQs page also.
__________________ Washable Doggie Pee Pads (Save 10% Enter YTSAVE10 at checkout) Cathy, Teddy, Winston and Baby Clyde...RIP angels ![]() ![]() |
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![]() | #288 | |
YT 2000 Club Donating Member | ![]() Quote:
Data collection—Data on estimated risk and age of diagnosis of mast cell tumor, hemangiosarcoma, lymphoma or lymphosarcoma, all other cancers, and all cancers combined as well as estimated risk and age at diagnosis of behavioral problems were obtained for Vizslas from a survey conducted on that breed in 2008.1 The survey was designed by statisticians at the West Chester Statistics Institute and administered via an anonymous online questionnaire at a site hosted by West Chester University Internet Presentations Group. There was a direct link to that site from the Vizsla Club of America website, and the survey was advertised in a variety of email lists, websites, magazines, and newsletters to which Vizsla owners would have access. Responses were allowed to be posted between January 21 and December 15, 2008. I was looking at this method of collection. And it seems like this would be a grade school error and not what appears to be institutes/professionals in the design and administration of an on line survey. I am pretty sure there are ways to do an on line survey and keep the indentity of the owner/kennel anonymous and still prevent multiplicity of entries for the same dog/person, etc. After all there are some regions here that allow on line voting for elections! For sure they have figured a way to insure only one vote for one person. The SkepVet has done one such review of this study, surely there will be more experts contributing their own opinion on the research methodology etc. And maybe an opportunity for the authors of the study to comment or clarify questions with response to on line survey methodology. Data integrity and collection is a very key point. If the folks who are owners of Viszlas who also financially contributed to this study, I propose they would be pretty carefull about their reporting. After all they want some answers and were willing to fund in part this study. And they would have access to their own vet records to "refresh" their memory. The age of death of a pet is hardly something one easily forgets, nor if they had cancer. If as argued people were incentivized to complete this survey, and by that I mean, they have a deep and abiding passion for the overall health of their breed, then what pray tell would be the motive to skew the results? To knowingly submit bad information. After all they will likely also be the ones to fund further research into Viszlas. To argue as the SkepVet has done, that Viszlas might not represent the whole dog population is quite frankly obvious. It was a unibreed study, and designed to be a unibreed study to answer specific questions and start to build a body of research on Viszlas. As a matter of note I also find it quite surprising, that none of the studies I have read in recent years, go back to compare their results to the "hallmark" studies that must have been done on "all breeds" that supported a veterinary position of s/n about six months old, and the risks across all breeds for many of the health concerns that are talked about if you don't do by six months old. Another argument made can and will be made against any study every designed here in North America. If the fact that 80% of our dogs are neutered then if you limit the study to N.A only, intact animals will always represent only a fraction of the total dog population. And likely those animals in part will be used for breeding and or for sporting, hunting, and or performance dogs. Not your "usual" pet. It is a fact that to find for many breeds enough intact animals to participate in studies is very difficult. They will come mainly from organizations like performance/obedience/protection and or from breeders. I do agree with the SkepVet in that a likely true assumption is that we take prime care of our athletes and our dogs used for breeding. Always of course excepting the puppy mills (which I hardly think would contribute to breed surveys) and bybers who likely would not as well. If I put aside for one moment the data collection integrity etc, I have a problem with only having spay/neuter category greater than 1 yr old. This category must then include retired breeding dogs, and or dogs who were held for breeding but never bred for a variety of reasons. Most breeders will not s/n before 1yr old, in almost all dog breeds. But they will retire females and spay them at 4 or 5 or 6 yrs old. Males not so much, although some do get neutered for a specific health problem if one does occur. In the dog performance sport world for large breeds, many females will not get bred, but will get spayed at or after 18months old. Now for Vizsla females that might not hold true if indeed their incidence of ED HD etc is only at 9% which I find surprising. Just some thoughts on this. .
__________________ Razzle and Dara. Our clan. RIP Karma Dec 24th 2004-July 14 2013 RIP Zoey Jun9 th 2008-May 12 2012. RIP Magic,Mar 26 2006July 1st 2018 | |
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![]() | #289 | |
YT 2000 Club Donating Member | ![]() Quote:
Agree with this one ![]() ![]() ![]()
__________________ Razzle and Dara. Our clan. RIP Karma Dec 24th 2004-July 14 2013 RIP Zoey Jun9 th 2008-May 12 2012. RIP Magic,Mar 26 2006July 1st 2018 | |
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![]() | #290 |
YT 2000 Club Donating Member | ![]() I emailed the Skepvet on the study design for Viszlas: Here in is his Here in is his response the bolding is mine. skeptvet says: June 20, 2014 at 4:44 pm The problem with recall bias and with misclassification of different kinds in studies that use similar methods is a well-recognized source of error. It is not something unique to this study, nor does it automatically invalidate the results. However, it is an uncontrolled source of bias that potentially reduces the internal and external validity of the trial. Similarly, the limitation to one breed clearly does reduce the extent to which we can generalize the results to other breeds or mixed breeds. Again, that doesn’t mean the results aren’t worth considering, but it does mean we cannot reasonably use the results of this one trial to dramatically alter our understanding of the risks and benefits of neutering or our specific practices. It is one bit of evidence out of hundreds of studies with its own strengths and weaknesses, and it must be evaluated in that context. Automatic neutering of all dogs of both sexes at 6 months of age is absolutely an arbitrary practice with little in the way of evidentiary support. The trick is that when we reject such an arbitrary, non-evidence-based practice we be careful not to replace it with another.
__________________ Razzle and Dara. Our clan. RIP Karma Dec 24th 2004-July 14 2013 RIP Zoey Jun9 th 2008-May 12 2012. RIP Magic,Mar 26 2006July 1st 2018 Last edited by gemy; 06-20-2014 at 04:57 PM. |
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![]() | #291 | ||
Donating YT 10K Club Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: S. W. Suburbs of Chicago, IL
Posts: 12,235
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__________________ “Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference.” ![]() | ||
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![]() | #292 | |
YT 2000 Club Donating Member | ![]() Quote:
From the same study, further on towards the summary. For both species and genders, obesity is a significant detriment of gonadectomy. Veterinarians can use this opportunity to talk to clients about proper nutrition and exercise for maintenance of normal body weight. Setting aside obesity, the clear benefit of ovariohysterectomy for bitches and queens is evident. For male dogs, the high incidence of BPH artificially increases this impact factor. Because castration at the time of clinical manifestation of BPH is curative and because dogs are unlikely to develop clinical manifestations of this disorder until 2 to 3 years of age, castration can safely be deferred until that time in most dogs.40–42 Well I will say Benign is just that Benign and not Cancerous. A slight enlargement of the prostate gland will not have any effect on the male dogs health. And even this author says there is no overt health reason to neuter a male dog early. Once again a study that does not show cause and effect. The assumption which may or may not be valid, that obesity after s/n is a direct owner mis-management fault is just that an assumption. It needs to be studied, because obesity has many health risks associated with it. THe metabolic effect of s/n might just be a clue that could elucidate on what breeds and what sexes s/n at different ages is. Of course the study would have to be designed to measure metabolic rates before s/n, and for some years after s/n. At this time, my thoughts are that there appears to be no definitive guidance on what studies can be attributed to all breeds/mutts/mixes/designer dogs, and what is the scientific basis on which you can safely determine this study (which ever one it is), can be applicable to all breeds. It also appears that at this point we don't have any studies that even tries to look at "cause and effect". Perhaps getting the full mapping of each dog breeds Genome might help in future design of studies.
__________________ Razzle and Dara. Our clan. RIP Karma Dec 24th 2004-July 14 2013 RIP Zoey Jun9 th 2008-May 12 2012. RIP Magic,Mar 26 2006July 1st 2018 | |
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![]() | #293 |
Donating YT 10K Club Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: S. W. Suburbs of Chicago, IL
Posts: 12,235
| ![]() I found this conversation very interesting in the BREEDER FORUM regarding how you need to handle unaltered pets in your home and feel that anyone considering not spaying or neutering their family pets take a look at it. This is real life with intact dogs and not abstract studies and to me there seems to be a lot of work involved with keeping intact animals and it is not for the casual pet owner. After reading this exchange between a couple of members it seems it might even be dangerous to leave your home without crating and rotating. Personally, all of mine for the most part live very peacefully together and I never have to worry about things like hormones setting off dog fight. http://www.yorkietalk.com/forums/bre...ml#post4457717
__________________ “Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference.” ![]() Last edited by megansmomma; 06-30-2014 at 09:55 AM. |
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![]() | #294 |
YT 2000 Club Donating Member | ![]() To Neuter or Not to Neuter - What You Should Know - Page 1 Here is the link. No really new research although he does quote the Viszla study, which is of rather recent vintage. Read it through nothing really surprising, he states more research is needed yada, yada, yada; a fact most of us know. Especially broad research unequivocally across the dog genus.
__________________ Razzle and Dara. Our clan. RIP Karma Dec 24th 2004-July 14 2013 RIP Zoey Jun9 th 2008-May 12 2012. RIP Magic,Mar 26 2006July 1st 2018 |
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![]() | #295 |
YT 500 Club Member | ![]() I believe everything happens for a reason in people and pets. My first dog came from a pet store and lived to be 16 with no health problems. He was neutered at 5 months and never had muscle problems even at 16 years old. Some dogs come from great breeders and have liver shuts, CT, kidney problems. I really don't think there is no rhyme or reason. I do believe we are all here for a limited amount of time and some people are real healthy to the end and some are not. Some exercise exercise and eat right and die young of cancer or heart disease. Some abuse there bodies and live to be 80. I think we put to much thought into everything. I had a dog with CT and he was misdiagnosed and was on no medicine for 6 years with it and fainted 3 times a years from it for 5 years and then I finally put him to sleep at 12. He was meant to live to 12. Last edited by mindy10; 09-26-2014 at 12:42 PM. |
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![]() | #296 |
YT 2000 Club Donating Member | ![]() Well Mindy, I don't take what seems to be a fatalistic view of health. I believe that science evidenced based research can truly help to inform our decisions. And it is necessary to do. Absolutely. I do agree that despite the best knowledge we have at the time, dogs get sick, so do humans, but that doesn't mean we should not try to understand why, and hopefully find preventatives. There is no 100% guarantee on life, except that death will come to all of us, and if you are human Taxes too ![]()
__________________ Razzle and Dara. Our clan. RIP Karma Dec 24th 2004-July 14 2013 RIP Zoey Jun9 th 2008-May 12 2012. RIP Magic,Mar 26 2006July 1st 2018 |
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![]() | #297 |
YT 2000 Club Donating Member | ![]() It also provides references to research - some studies are new to me and not yet linked in this thread https://www.doglistener.co.uk/neutering_definitive What I found particularly interesting is that it is in Sweden *illegal* to s+n a dog unless for medical reasons. Also that breeders have to be licensed/certified and health warranties for 3 years. Also no pet shop sales allowed.
__________________ Razzle and Dara. Our clan. RIP Karma Dec 24th 2004-July 14 2013 RIP Zoey Jun9 th 2008-May 12 2012. RIP Magic,Mar 26 2006July 1st 2018 |
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![]() | #298 |
T. Bumpkins & Co. Donating YT Member Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: New England
Posts: 9,816
| ![]() My coworker did not spay her pup. She's spent $5,000 on cancer so far to deal with the fall out. Dog is still hanging on. So preventable.
__________________ Washable Doggie Pee Pads (Save 10% Enter YTSAVE10 at checkout) Cathy, Teddy, Winston and Baby Clyde...RIP angels ![]() ![]() |
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![]() | #299 |
YT 2000 Club Donating Member | ![]() Many types of cancer (at this point) are not preventable, at least as far as our knowledge goes. Lymphoma, bladder, liver, heart, brain, kidney etc as far as I am aware are not associated with either spay or neuter. or intact dogs. Studies how-ever have shown that for certain types of cancer - the risk appears to be either reduced or increased by s+n. Mammary cancer while rare in dogs is increased by leaving an un-bred female intact (the most risky) - next is an older female who has been bred. Hemangiosarcoma and Osteosarcomas and Sarcomas very deadly are highly increased in s+n (spayed or neutered dogs). Hemangiosarcoma is, for more than a few breeds quite common. Cancer overall appears to be the leading cause of death in dogs... Surely we should try to find out why this is so. I neutered my cat, and he died around middle age of a Sarcoma. I did not spay my female dog and she died young of Lymphoma. One cancer associated with neutering(sarcoma), one cancer not associated.... (lymphoma). Informed and judicious weighing of the risks versus benefits for your particular breed of dog is always wise.
__________________ Razzle and Dara. Our clan. RIP Karma Dec 24th 2004-July 14 2013 RIP Zoey Jun9 th 2008-May 12 2012. RIP Magic,Mar 26 2006July 1st 2018 |
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![]() | #300 |
Donating YT Addict Join Date: Aug 2010 Location: SW USA
Posts: 2,505
| ![]() Gemy. Thank you for the article. A long read, but well worth it. I do believe that on balance, waiting until maturity is a good idea. But of course one has to protect the dogs from procreating until then. :-( |
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