I’ve had dogs since I was a kid (a time lost in the mists of antiquity). And up until recently they all died of various things with only one being a hit-and-run. In the last twenty years we’ve had 5 dogs and all 5 have had cancer and were euthanized before it really affected quality of life. The really interesting thing is that all of them had different types (sometimes multiple types) of cancer.
O’Malley – bone cancer/skin cancer/brain mass
Ranger – brain lesions/cancer
Titan – prostate cancer
Lou – malignant mass/sarcoma of the sinuses
Libby (this last Sunday) – Lung cancer (prolly spread from elsewhere first)
And it’s not just us…it seems to be the leading cause of death among our peer group. Interestingly a friend of ours whose father was a vet in Vietnam and came over in the 60s was telling us (many years ago) that cancer in dogs is unheard of in Vietnam and was very rare here in the states when he arrived. As processed dog food grew in use and buying horsemeat and scraps from the butcher decreased cancer death rates increased. Granted this is only anecdotal but it is interesting.
-Gregory
O’Malley – bone cancer/skin cancer/brain mass
Ranger – brain lesions/cancer
Titan – prostate cancer
Lou – malignant mass/sarcoma of the sinuses
Libby (this last Sunday) – Lung cancer (prolly spread from elsewhere first)
And it’s not just us…it seems to be the leading cause of death among our peer group. Interestingly a friend of ours whose father was a vet in Vietnam and came over in the 60s was telling us (many years ago) that cancer in dogs is unheard of in Vietnam and was very rare here in the states when he arrived. As processed dog food grew in use and buying horsemeat and scraps from the butcher decreased cancer death rates increased. Granted this is only anecdotal but it is interesting.
-Gregory