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 spaying and invitro???? so I went to my vet and he said that they could get her spayed. but then he mentioned something. p.s. im still going to spay her but can you tell me what this thing really is? lol so he said something about invitro fertilization. please comment and tell me if it is dangerous to do. I know what it is, can you guys tell me a little more like how does it work the cost the benafits of it and anything eles. p.s. im still going to spay her when the vet tells me to :) thanks | 
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 WHY in the world would your vet even mention in vitro fertilization? :confused::rolleyes::confused: I am sorry but not to be rude but am very curious...WHAT is the purpose of your post??? | 
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 Oh please get a new vet! Any vet that encourages someone to breed their dog when you CLEARLY want her spayed, is not a good vet. Breeding is best left to the experienced and educated. If you really want to breed, find a local breeder to mentor you and study study study! Lots of testing and money is involved. Good breeders usually break even or even go into debt to breed properly. | 
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 Invitro fertilization is for breeding purposes, where the females eggs are flushed then mixed with sperm in Petri dish, then reinserted into a female. This is rare in dogs.  Maybe your vet meant something else since you are getting your dog spayed. Unless he wants your females eggs to plant in another dog. Which would bring up a lot of questions. | 
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 I am after she gets spayed. he is a small company it is like a new family owned business. im going to switch him. | 
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 oh that sounds really hard and bad. im spaying her on Monday. when she is spayed should I change her feeding schedual? | 
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 Glad you will find another vet as this raises lots of questions of his ethics? Make sure when you get her spayed you let him know you do not want her eggs harvested and do not invitro | 
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 yes im switching and maybe adopting another one from the shelter :). | 
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 If you get her spayed, you can't do invitro. Spaying removes her uterus and the horns, which she would need in order to have puppies. IVF is rarely done in dogs. Your vet makes me wonder???? | 
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 Not to mention the surrogate dog would have to have fertility drugs and other drugs to trick her body into not rejecting the blastocysts. I've had IVF 8-9 times, so I'm pretty familiar with the human side of it. Not as sure on the dog side. I do know it's rarely done. AI is the preferred method, but still a dog has to be ready (in heat and ovulating) to properly AI. | 
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