10/27/2025
*Preventing unwanted litters is a goal we all shareβbut it's time to rethink the surgical approach. Hysterectomies and vasectomies, which preserve hormonal balance, can safely be performed as early as 8 weeks of age, making dogs sterile without disrupting their natural hormones.
New peer-reviewed study published in Nature:
How a dogβs lifetime exposure to his own hormones (before being neutered) affects how well he handles aging and frailty later in life.
Study Background
β’ Frailty = when older dogs (and people) become weaker, less resilient, and more prone to illness and death.
β’ Most research looks at how to prevent frailty β this study looked at what makes some dogs bounce back better after frailty sets in.
β’ The focus was on the HPG axis β the hormonal system that produces testosterone and controls reproduction.
Key Findings
β’ Dogs neutered very young (before 2 years old) had:
o A much higher risk of death once they became frail.
o About 16% higher mortality for every small increase in frailty.
β’ Dogs kept intact longer (more than ~10 years) showed:
o No increase in mortality linked to frailty.
o Their hormones seemed to βbufferβ the negative effects of aging.
β’ Each extra year of natural hormone exposure reduced frailty-related death risk by ~1%.
What It Means
β’ Hormones from the te**es may protect against the worst effects of aging later in life.
β’ Removing them too early could make dogs less resilient to age-related decline.
β’ Frailty isnβt just about getting old β itβs also shaped by early-life events like the timing of neutering.
β’ This supports a βlife courseβ view: what happens early in life affects health decades later.
Why It Matters
β’ The study suggests timing of neutering might influence how well dogs age.