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2007-03-18 07:42:31 · 11 answers · asked by royride 2 in Pets Dogs

11 answers

Hi Royride!
Not only, you solve are problems
1, Birth control. If you also own a ***** that has not been spayed, this will prevent unwanted pregnancies.
2. Stopping territorial behavior such as urine marking.
3. Stopping sexual behavior such as masturbation (humping cushions, teddies etc).
4. Reducing dominance aggression.
5. Eliminating the possibility of testicular cancer later in life.
6. Reducing the likelihood of prostate disease later in life.
Please look article: http://www.askedweb.com/askedweb/Neutering_The_Male_Dog/

Intact male dogs (those not neutered) are prone to a number of annoying behaviors that are directly related to testosterone production (urine marking; mounting other dogs, objects, and people; roaming in search of females; and aggression toward other male dogs). Having the dog neutered, thus eliminating testosterone production, greatly reduces these behaviors, as well as decreases the animal's level of stress.
Jason Homan

2007-03-18 07:59:03 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

If you mean urinating, NO. If you mean wondering off, I would not know. I have never had my dog neutered and I have never had to worry about my dog wondering off. Every male dog I have owned has never wondered off while outside with me and they have had many chances. No, if I am in the garage or in the front yard I do not chain my male dogs. They are always by my side.
My problem IS my female, she wonders off the first chance she gets. She has been spayed so explain that.

2007-03-18 09:36:35 · answer #2 · answered by CommonSense 5 · 0 0

There are limitless causes that ought to favor to reason it: incontinence via urinary sphincter muscle mass dropping elasticity from age, kidney or bladder infections (or stones or crystals), diabetes, cushings, and so on. Take a urine trend to the vet with you and performance it analyzed (it really is fairly a lot inexpensive-I pay $21 for urinalysis). If no clinical reason is were given right here upon, ASK the vet if Proin is an determination on your dogs (and also you in lots of situations ought to favor to ask for it).

2016-11-26 20:47:03 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It can help, but it goes hand in hand with housebreaking. Neutering alone won't reduce his urge to mark his territory...our 6 yo Italian Greyhound was neutered younger than usual due to a non-descended testicle and still does it if not watched.

2007-03-18 07:47:44 · answer #4 · answered by BB 5 · 0 0

Male dogs lift their legs to mark territory (also to pee, of course), but once they've started being territorial, it's hard to stop them by neutering them. Although my vet says that it may actually help, there's no guarantee. It 's best to get your dog fixed before they go through puberty and before the territory marking begins. Ask your vet to be sure.

2007-03-18 08:13:29 · answer #5 · answered by jicour 3 · 0 0

If you mean, urinating on the furniture, chair legs--yes it usually does. After they are neutered, the have no desire to "mark" their territory. Good Luck.

2007-03-18 07:46:52 · answer #6 · answered by Queen-o-the-Damned 3 · 0 0

usually yes it does. I have heard from many people once they had it done the dog was much better about not peeing inside. the will also check for bladder or urine infection before surgery or they should so make sure they do.

2007-03-18 08:21:45 · answer #7 · answered by Shelly t 6 · 0 0

if you mean peeing... no. It has nothing to do with that.
If you mean humping... in some cases, again, no. My friend has a dog, neutered, and he humps everything..

2007-03-18 07:46:38 · answer #8 · answered by Sydmom 4 · 0 0

My male poodle was neutered 12 yrs. ago and it did not
even slow him down...NOTHING we do stops him..

2007-03-18 07:51:37 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

yes it does

2007-03-18 07:44:50 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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