| Literature DB >> 31649939 |
Marta Zlotnick1,2, Virginia Corrigan2,3, Erin Griffin3, Megan Alayon3, Laura Hungerford1.
Abstract
Saint Francis Service Dogs (SFSD) trains dogs to aid people with multiple sclerosis, brain injury, and many other conditions. Organizations like SFSD must carefully consider when to neuter dogs to give them the best chance at successfully completing lengthy and expensive training. The objective of this retrospective cohort study was to assess differences in the incidence of health or behavior problems leading to dismissal between dogs neutered at different ages. Data on 245 dogs-including birth date, sex, neuter date, dismissal or successful completion of training, and (where applicable) reason for dismissal-were collected from SFSD records. Age-at-neuter was grouped (<7 months; 7-11 months; > 11 months) and compared for dogs who successfully completed training and dogs who were dismissed. Dogs neutered from 7 to 11 months of age were dismissed at a significantly lower overall rate than dogs neutered at an older or younger age. There were no differences between males and females. Labrador and golden retrievers were less likely to be dismissed than other breeds. This pattern was the same for dismissals for behavioral reasons. Dogs neutered at <7 months had more than twice the risk for health-related dismissals as dogs neutered at any older age and this pattern held for orthopedic dismissals. Labradors were at higher risk for orthopedic-related dismissal than golden retrievers and all other breeds. This study suggests that there is a relationship between dogs' age at neuter and the incidence of health and behavioral problems that can lead to dismissal from service dog training.Entities:
Keywords: behavior; dogs; gonadectomy; neuter; orthopedics; service dogs; spay
Year: 2019 PMID: 31649939 PMCID: PMC6792465 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Characteristics of dogs that graduated or were dismissed from training from 1996 through 2017 among a cohort of SFSD dogs.
| Female ( | 29 (37.7%) | 40 (51.9%) | 8 (10.4%) | 0 (0%) | 3 (3.9%) [3 O, 0 H] |
| Male ( | 70 (41.7%) | 70 (41.7%) | 17 (10.1%) | 11 (6.5%) | 3 (1.8%) [2 O, 1 H] |
| Labrador Retriever ( | 63 (42.3%) | 58 (38.9%) | 22 (14.8%) | 6 (4.0%) | 5 (3.4%) [4 O, 1 H] |
| Golden Retriever ( | 25 (43.9%) | 27 (47.4%) | 3 (5.3%) | 2 (3.5%) | 1 (1.8%) [1 O, 0 H] |
| Mixed or Other Breed ( | 11 (28.2%) | 25 (64.1%) | 0 (0%) | 3 (7.7%) | 0 (0%) |
| <7 months of age ( | 35 (31.8%) | 52 (47.2%) | 15 (13.6%) | 8 (7.3%) | 4 (3.6%) [3 O, 1 H] |
| 7-11 months of age ( | 34 (58.6%) | 20 (34.5%) | 4 (6.9%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| > 11 months of age ( | 30 (39.0%) | 38 (49.4%) | 6 (7.8%) | 3 (3.9%) | 2 (2.6%) [2 O, 0 H] |
| Continuous (days) | 284 (115–1,070) | 238 (109–644) | 254 (101–1,319) | 194 (115–478) | 236 (120–459) |
Actual numbers and row percentages are reported for categorical data. Continuous variables are indicated by reporting median and range for non-normally distributed variables.
Dogs that had both behavioral and orthopedic (O) or other health (H) reasons for dismissal are included in totals for these columns.
Figure 1Percent of each training outcome for females and males by age at neutering. Health dismissals are red, behavior dismissals are yellow, simultaneous health and behavior dismissals are orange, and graduations are in green.
Figure 2Percent of each training outcome for golden retrievers, Labrador retrievers, and pooled other breeds by age at neutering. Health dismissals are red, behavior dismissals are yellow, simultaneous health and behavior dismissals are orange, and graduations are in green.