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2007-02-24 19:08:58 · 13 answers · asked by whattheheck 4 in Pets Dogs

13 answers

Hi whattheheck!
Yes! and it big luck if not fixet dog old and if not to diseases.
For females, the reasons in favor of spaying are:
* 1. Birth control. Unwanted pregnancies are a hassle, if they occur you have the responsibility of terminating the pregnancy (this can be done via a simple injection soon after mating), paying for any complications with the birth (Caesarian sections are expensive).
* 2. Stopping erratic behavior associated with being on heat.
* 3. Decreasing the likelihood of breast cancer later in life.
* 4. Eliminating the risk of developing a pyometra, a life threatening infection of the uterus.
* 5. Eliminating the risk of ovarian or uterine cancer. "

This known for world clinics, the fact. Please look article: http://www.askedweb.com/askedweb/Sterilization_Of_The_Female_Dog/

A female dog spayed before her first heat will have a near zero chance of developing mammary cancer. After the first heat, this incidence climbs to 7% and after the second heat the risk is 25% (one in four!). It is easy to see that an early spay can completely prevent what is frequently a very difficult and potentially fatal form of cancer.

Jason Homan

2007-02-24 22:38:31 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I have had dogs and known first had of other dogs who had cancer even thought they had been fixed from a young age. Yes they are less likely but it is not 100%

2007-02-24 19:43:11 · answer #2 · answered by raven blackwing 6 · 1 0

i haven't any expert documentation yet what I do have is adventure. I incredibly have had all my women spayed via the age of 6months. I incredibly have had Akitas, Shepherds, substantial Malamutes, Norweigan elkhounds, and black labs. they have run the gamut in temperments and capability tiers. if your dogs is the hyper type, having domestic dogs can't replace that. As for prolonged existence, it does help to evade particular cancers that are straightforward in dogs. My dogs have lived to be between 12 and 17 years previous.

2016-12-14 05:08:24 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Not exactly.

They *are* less likely to get cancer if they are fixed. And the risk of getting cancer decreases alot if they get fixed before their first period.

To say they are prone to get it....is to suggest not getting them fixed is the *cause* of it.

It is not.

But their risk of getting cancer decreases significantly if they are fixed before the first 6 months of their lives (or before their 1st period...same thing here).

Hope that helped

2007-02-24 19:20:15 · answer #4 · answered by KarenS 3 · 0 0

YES they are more at risk! You can decrease the risk by almost 80 percent if you spay before the first heat cycle. If not spayed they are more at risk for pyromethria (sp?) cancer etc. and if not spayed you are also contributing to the homeless pet population if your pet becomes pregnant.

2007-02-24 19:30:18 · answer #5 · answered by beanie 3 · 0 0

Estrogen is implicated in the development of mammary tumors. Spaying removes estrogen from the body.
Therefore, spaying your dog makes them highly unlikely to get mammary cancer.

2007-02-24 21:10:02 · answer #6 · answered by renodogmom 5 · 1 0

Yes its very true. Remove the uterus and you remove the chance of uterine cancer and the possibility of pyometra (infected uterus, a life threating condition). You also greatly decrease the chance of mammary cancer if they are not getting the hormones all their life.

2007-02-24 22:22:00 · answer #7 · answered by cs 5 · 1 0

I am sure you know many women get cancer of the ovaries or the uterus. The same applies for dogs. If you spay them, they no longer have ovaries or uterus, so they don't get this kind of cancer. It's not that not spaying causes cancer.

2007-02-24 20:18:19 · answer #8 · answered by cpinatsi 7 · 1 0

There is no guarantee that she will get cancer if you don't get her fixed early but the chances are much, MUCH higher.

2007-02-24 20:03:29 · answer #9 · answered by Elena 5 · 1 0

My veterinarian told me this is true. I've read it in books also. Best to get her spayed before her first cycle.

2007-02-24 20:06:28 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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