Vets and Suspision

I wish I could properly convey some of my advanced sexual knowledge of my doggos health issues...

Like how do you explain to your vet that your un-neutered older aged year old male is showing signs of prostate issues with bloody ejaculate these days =/

Early signs of health issues that you're aware of but any normal person would be clueless to =(
I should add, that I did get it treated successfully by lookup up other symptoms that would show up later and just stating he had those already =P he's doing fine now. Just sucks that it's not so easy to keep your partners health and wellness taken care of without threat of loss.
 
Like how do you explain to your vet that your un-neutered older aged year old male is showing signs of prostate issues with bloody ejaculate these days =/
pretty easily actually.
when i was younger and way dumber, i got to walk my friend's dog alone. being a 24/7 horny teenager i of course ended up giving him a hand. there was blood in his ejaculate and when we got back i just told the friend i noticed blood after the boy peed on a rock. luckily it turned out to be a mild urinal tract infection.
it's not that hard to come up with anything, especially if their health is at any risk.
 
In my country, we free to have many pet we want, I never went to vets or anything... So mybe that's why zoophilia never get caught... Some people that have dog, their dog vulva look puffy ,then we know he & his dog have zoo relationship
 
In my country, we free to have many pet we want, I never went to vets or anything... So mybe that's why zoophilia never get caught... Some people that have dog, their dog vulva look puffy ,then we know he & his dog have zoo relationship
you never go to a vet?!

also, puffy vulva means literally nothing. some just are like that. it won't become puffier with "use" either.
 
you never go to a vet?!

also, puffy vulva means literally nothing. some just are like that. it won't become puffier with "use" either.
No...every country is different I guess,.. I don't know about vulva condition either, but I know the different between dog vulva that have fuck by man & it very sexy
 
First time i went to my vet she asked iff i want to neuter my lab, i just plain and simple said no, she actually said he would be growing up a real healthy male dog but would be pissing against everything 😂 she smiled while saying that and that whas that, she has 2 male Cane Corso's herself both also not neutered and she said i can understand your decision.
 
No...every country is different I guess,.. I don't know about vulva condition either, but I know the different between dog vulva that have fuck by man & it very sexy
omitting basic health check ups and vaccinations isn't "every country is different i guess", it's negligence.

there is no difference between vulva "that have fuck by man", they're flexible and don't get puffier or looser. they also get back to original shape pretty quickly after giving birth, like within few weeks (which is what i think you wrongly describe as "vulva that have fuck by man") .
 
so u dont care about animal health? whats when dog is sick, do u let them suffer and die and just get a ,,new,, one?
Of course when I send them to the vet if my dog get sick... Until now my dog never get sick except the spreading of some virus that kill many pets... And die from old age, that's why at this moment I don't own any dog
 
but I know the different between dog vulva that have fuck by man & it very sexy
No you don't, because unless you are watching the act, you cannot tell if a dog has been fucked. Her vulva springs back within minutes after, back to its original shape.

My girl has a puffy cookie, it was puffy before we started, and hasn't changed in the 400+ times we've mated, or the several times she's had my shepsky's knot.

My first girl had a nearly hidden vulva, no change there either was ever observed.
 
This has been a very helpful thread! I have had similar questions regarding eventually getting a puppy and not getting him neutered. But you all make a fair point in regards to paying for a surgery that you think is unethical. Hoping I don't have to deal with that too much when I buy or adopt one.
 
I don't know how it is in your countries all but here in france, vets don't ask that much about it. Like, it's not a big thing. Got 3 vets in total and It was everytime like that, they just asked about it during an usual conversation and every time I told them (as I told to every person who asked actually) that I will see how the things go and we now are here, 6 years after and no one ever asked me again.

🐾
 
well, this can go really bad. If i'm not mistaken if the vet exam the anus of your dog he can easily see if it's penetrated by you
 
well, this can go really bad. If i'm not mistaken if the vet exam the anus of your dog he can easily see if it's penetrated by you
You're mistaken. Unless you're stupid enough to fuck fido in the parking lot before going in for an exam, nobody is even remotely likely to be able to tell whether you've dicked your dog without taking samples and looking for sperm. (Unless you're doing injury due to being too big compared to the opening that's being used)
 
Both my dogs still have their stuff intact. I think it's cruel to arbitrarily chop off animals genitals just because some people lack responsibility. There's nothing wrong with my dogs having genitals. They're born with them, they're supposed to have them, and unless they're life is in danger by having it, they're keeping them.

The most common response I hear when people find out my dogs have balls is "bUt cANceR" as if they all are just born with cancer and MUST have their nuts chopped off. It's so frustrating.

I haven't had any vets question it so far, but I would just say there's no reason why I should mutilate my perfectly healthy dog. It's inhumane imo.
 
You're mistaken. Unless you're stupid enough to fuck fido in the parking lot before going in for an exam, nobody is even remotely likely to be able to tell whether you've dicked your dog without taking samples and looking for sperm. (Unless you're doing injury due to being too big compared to the opening that's being used)

Unless they're faking it there are definitely people here who are at least that stupid, and a few who are way beyond.
 
Our vet did advise to spay him, just because of testicular cancer. We declined, on the basis of breeding him. Didn't tell him to whom tho :gsd_love:
 
Our vet did advise to spay him, just because of testicular cancer. We declined, on the basis of breeding him. Didn't tell him to whom tho :gsd_love:
Testicular cancer is a (relatively) "no big deal" type of cancer. Yeah, if left to run its course, it's gonna be fatal, but it's usually very slow-moving, and you'll only rarely see it metastasize until it's *WAY* advanced - think "far enough along that he's almost certainly gonna die of it no matter what's done." The cure is usually 100% - Take off the involved testicle, and that's nearly always all that's needed. (Again, as long as it isn't very advanced when detected)
 
There's actually a growing no spay no neuter movement in the pet community now that the health drawbacks are appearing more and more. Now we're opting for vasectomy and ovary sparing spays. Spaying can actually increase cancer risk in dogs. Join the fb group called "ovary sparing spay and vasectomy info group." The breeder I was looking at actually said they were against spaying and neutering for health reasons and gave a link to a group of vets that would do vasectomies & ovary sparing spays instead. On their page they said:

In the best interest of our dogs we are now recommending that you have your dog altered in a way that retains your dogs sex hormones without the risk of reproduction. Ovary sparing spays and vasectomy are now available for dogs. These procedures can be done as early as eight-months of age.

ARIZONA​

Tom Phafman, DVM
Integrative Vet Med Center
615 W Deer Valley Rd #114
Phoenix, AZ 85027
(623) 594-6758
Offers ovary sparing spay, ovariectomy, vasectomy.


The above link will take you to a list of veternarians across the United States that perform sex hormone spay and vasectomy procedures.
I just checked your list. In all of New York State there are only three vets on it.
 
I just checked your list. In all of New York State there are only three vets on it.

There's actually a growing no spay no neuter movement in the pet community now that the health drawbacks are appearing more and more. Now we're opting for vasectomy and ovary sparing spays. Spaying can actually increase cancer risk in dogs. Join the fb group called "ovary sparing spay and vasectomy info group." The breeder I was looking at actually said they were against spaying and neutering for health reasons and gave a link to a group of vets that would do vasectomies & ovary sparing spays instead. On their page they said:

In the best interest of our dogs we are now recommending that you have your dog altered in a way that retains your dogs sex hormones without the risk of reproduction. Ovary sparing spays and vasectomy are now available for dogs. These procedures can be done as early as eight-months of age.

ARIZONA​

Tom Phafman, DVM
Integrative Vet Med Center
615 W Deer Valley Rd #114
Phoenix, AZ 85027
(623) 594-6758
Offers ovary sparing spay, ovariectomy, vasectomy.


The above link will take you to a list of veternarians across the United States that perform sex hormone spay and vasectomy procedures.

Breeders are NOT Veterinarians, they never went to 10 years of schooling to learn anything, they have no expertise outside of what they've gleaned through peers and Facebook posts. PLEASE DO NOT TAKE HEALTH ADVICE FROM BREEDERS.

Also, it's not hard to find crackpot doctors of all kinds promoting unscientific reasons for new procedures as a means of making a name for themselves in the field. I wish I could say Veterinarians were above this, but they aren't. The vast vast vast majority of them truly have your pet's best interests at heart, but some of them will sell any lie at all if it puts a dollar in their pocket.

Spaying and neutering is safe and ethical.

"now that the health drawbacks are appearing more and more"

We didn't just start spaying and neutering 5 years ago. It's been closer to 90 years. Health drawbacks are not "appearing more and more" suddenly. Health problems are being erroneously blamed on neutering by people who are looking for ANY excuse to oppose it.

You wanna fuck your dogs, hey cool. It's fun. I get it. But it is immoral to come up with bullshit excuses to keep them intact just so you can have sex with them. Follow your vet's recommendations.
 
Health drawbacks are not "appearing more and more" suddenly. Health problems are being erroneously blamed on neutering by people who are looking for ANY excuse to oppose it.

You wanna fuck your dogs, hey cool. It's fun. I get it. But it is immoral to come up with bullshit excuses to keep them intact just so you can have sex with them. Follow your vet's recommendations.

I largely agree with all you said, but there are disadvantages to spay/neuter that were largely unknown until more recently; issues such as incidence of cancers being increased, bone and joint development issues due to early spay/neuter, etc.

That said, there are still a lot of issues resolved by it. With regard to many large breed bitches I'm largely pro-spay after they're adults, pyometra is a shitty way to die.
 
Spaying and neutering is safe and ethical.
how can screwing one's hormone levels for life ever be either of those?
and yes, health drawbacks didn't start appearing all of a sudden. they were always there, it's just a fairly recent thing that some ppl started looking if there even are any.

it's fucking sad it came to ppl having to have a good reason/argument why not mutilate and not the other way around.
 
how can screwing one's hormone levels for life ever be either of those?
and yes, health drawbacks didn't start appearing all of a sudden. they were always there, it's just a fairly recent thing that some ppl started looking if there even are any.

it's fucking sad it came to ppl having to have a good reason/argument why not mutilate and not the other way around.

Flipside, how can allowing a companion to get pyometra be ethical? For some breeds the chances are extremely high and contribute to the low average life expectancies.

It's not like this is a clear-cut all or nothing for either proposition, there are issues that spay prevents (not so much neuter that I know of) and there are issues that it can cause. Risks are often breed specific and should be considered as part of the decision. Not spaying, especially in breeds such as the Great Dane, comes with a 62% chance of pyometra by age 10; avoiding that and the high liklihood of a miserable death is not insignificant. The rates of mammary cancer can also be significant; however, to see any reduction in the rate one needs to spay before the age of 3 according to the most recent papers I have read (not a vet, but I try to read papers that are relevant)

Edit: For hormone levels, there's the OSS (Ovary Sparing Spay) which retains the ovaries, but yeets the uterus; thus, retaining much of the hormonal balance without the risk of pyometra....in theory as I haven't read many papers on this. My understaning is that it does not reduce the risks of mammary cancers, so might not be the preferred option for those breeds where that is a major issue. I would appreciate info on OSS papers.
 
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Flipside, how can allowing a companion to get pyometra be ethical? For some breeds the chances are extremely high and contribute to the low average life expectancies.

It's not like this is a clear-cut all or nothing for either proposition, there are issues that spay prevents (not so much neuter that I know of) and there are issues that it can cause. Risks are often breed specific and should be considered as part of the decision. Not spaying, especially in breeds such as the Great Dane, comes with a 62% chance of pyometra by age 10; avoiding that and the high liklihood of a miserable death is not insignificant. The rates of mammary cancer can also be significant; however, to see any reduction in the rate one needs to spay before the age of 3 according to the most recent papers I have read (not a vet, but I try to read papers that are relevant)

Edit: For hormone levels, there's the OSS (Ovary Sparing Spay) which retains the ovaries, but yeets the uterus; thus, retaining much of the hormonal balance without the risk of pyometra....in theory as I haven't read many papers on this. My understaning is that it does not reduce the risks of mammary cancers, so might not be the preferred option for those breeds where that is a major issue. I would appreciate info on OSS papers.
what keeps you from going on regular check ups if you know the specific potential risks? even more so for pyometra which is very spot-able if you know what to look for. i'd say the average zoo would keep that in mind, especially if they have a "extremely high chance breed". not to mention "we" are generally way closer with our partners than an average "dog person" to spot any changes or something being off.

it's weird putting a permanent solution for something that might not even happen. like cutting your legs off so you can't break them...
 
what keeps you from going on regular check ups if you know the specific potential risks? even more so for pyometra which is very spot-able if you know what to look for. i'd say the average zoo would keep that in mind, especially if they have a "extremely high chance breed". not to mention "we" are generally way closer with our partners than an average "dog person" to spot any changes or something being off.

it's weird putting a permanent solution for something that might not even happen. like cutting your legs off so you can't break them...

Given the number of zoos who've had companions die from pyo, I'm not sure I agree it's so spottable; it can be, but not always. I've seen 2 vets miss it. It doesn't take long for pyo to kill, if one is lucky and catches it early it's jst an enormous vet bill. That's a big gamble for high-risk breeds; is it worth that gamble? It is for some. I'm not saying everyone should, I just want people to understand the risks because so often in these threads people argue there aren't any and it's just done for convenience. I've posted it before, but here's a link to a study on the incidence of pyometra.

Not expecting any answers, but serious question for eveyone with a bitch, do you know what to look for?
Unless a person is in the habit of palpating, would they even know if something was off? "Is it supposed to feel like that?"
 
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