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Do Neutered Male Dogs Need Supplements?

by Carly Mansfield on May 26 2026
Walk into any pet store or scroll through any dog forum and you'll see the same advice: your neutered male dog needs a stack of supplements. Joint support, omega-3s, probiotics, a multivitamin, maybe something for his weight or coat. The list gets long quickly. Are any of these actually necessary? The honest answer is that some neutered male dogs benefit from certain supplements, but most don't need much beyond a quality diet. The trick is knowing which supplements have real evidence behind them for the specific issues neutered males face, and which are just marketing wrapped around a normal healthy dog. Here's the practical breakdown. Quick Summary Most neutered male dogs do not need a long list of supplements, but several have research support for the specific health changes that follow neutering. The most evidence-backed options are omega-3 fatty acids for inflammation and joint health, glucosamine and chondroitin for joint support (particularly in medium and large breeds neutered before 12 months), a quality probiotic for gut and immune health, and weight management nutrients like L-carnitine for dogs prone to post-neuter weight gain. Supplements for specific issues like anxiety (ashwagandha), urinary support (cranberry, D-mannose), or coat health (omega-6 and zinc) are useful when symptoms are present. A daily multivitamin is rarely needed if the dog is on a complete and balanced diet. The right supplement stack depends on the individual dog's breed, age at neuter, current health, and symptoms. What Changes in a Male Dog's Body After Neutering Before deciding on supplements, it helps to understand what actually shifts after surgery. Removing the testicles drops testosterone to near zero and triggers a permanent rise in luteinizing hormone (LH). These hormonal changes have real downstream effects. A 2024 study published in PMC documented metabolic shifts in neutered dogs, including decreased serotonin, decreased T4, and increased TSH. These changes help explain why post-neuter weight gain is so common. UC Davis research covering 35 breeds confirmed that larger breeds neutered before 12 months face significantly higher rates of joint disorders and certain cancers. And research from Oregon State University has linked elevated LH to several conditions including hypothyroidism, urinary issues, and joint problems. What this means in practical terms: the most common issues that show up in neutered males are weight gain, joint problems, occasional thyroid issues, and sometimes mood or anxiety changes. The supplements worth considering should address these specific risks, not arbitrary "wellness" categories. Supplements With Real Evidence for Neutered Males Omega-3 Fatty Acids This is probably the most universally recommended supplement and one of the few with strong research support. Fish oil (or a quality algal oil for dogs that don't tolerate fish) provides EPA and DHA, which reduce inflammation, support joint health, benefit the skin and coat, and may help with cognitive function in older dogs. For neutered males prone to weight gain and joint issues, omega-3s address both concerns at once. Look for products that list actual EPA and DHA amounts on the label rather than just "fish oil." Storage matters too, since omega-3s oxidize easily. Joint Support: Glucosamine and Chondroitin Joint supplements are one of the most evidence-supported categories for neutered male dogs, especially medium and large breeds. Research on Golden Retrievers and Labradors has shown that early-neutered males face significantly higher rates of hip dysplasia and cranial cruciate ligament tears. Glucosamine and chondroitin support cartilage health, MSM has anti-inflammatory properties, and green-lipped mussel is another well-supported option. For large or older neutered males, starting joint support before symptoms appear is reasonable given the elevated lifetime risk. Probiotics A quality probiotic supports gut health, which in turn affects immune function, hormone clearance, and even thyroid health (since some T4 to T3 conversion happens in the gut). For dogs that have had antibiotics, GI issues, or dietary changes, a probiotic can help restore balance. Look for products with multiple strains and CFU counts in the billions, and check that the brand specifies which strains have been studied in dogs. Veterinary-formulated options like Purina FortiFlora and Nutramax Proviable are commonly recommended. Weight Management Support Many neutered males gain weight even on the same diet they ate before surgery. The simplest fix is portion control, but a few supplements can help. L-carnitine helps the body use fat for energy and is included in many weight management formulas. Omega-3s help with metabolic inflammation. Fiber-rich additions like pumpkin or psyllium can increase satiety without adding calories. These don't replace diet and exercise, but they support the dog's body while you adjust the calorie balance. Supplements Worth Considering for Specific Issues For Anxiety or Behavioral Changes A 2022 randomized controlled trial published in the Journal of Veterinary Behavior found that dogs receiving 15 mg/kg of standardized ashwagandha root extract daily for four weeks showed significant reductions in urine cortisol and improvements in anxiety scores compared to placebo. L-theanine, found in products like Anxitane, also has research supporting calming effects in dogs. For neutered males that became more anxious or reactive after surgery, these are reasonable to try alongside training. For Urinary or Mild Incontinence Issues Urinary issues are less common in males than females after neutering, but they happen. Cranberry extract and D-mannose support overall urinary tract health. Pumpkin seed extract and saw palmetto have traditional use for urinary support. Persistent issues need a vet workup rather than supplements. For Coat and Skin Changes Hair thinning, dry skin, and coat texture changes can follow neutering. Omega-3s (already covered) help here too. Adding biotin, zinc, and vitamin E can support skin and coat quality. Evening primrose oil is another commonly used option for skin barrier function. For Prostate Support This is more relevant for intact males, since the prostate gland shrinks significantly after neutering, which dramatically reduces the risk of benign prostatic hyperplasia. However, prostate cancer can still occur in neutered males (and is actually about four times more common than in intact males), so it's worth knowing the symptoms and asking your vet to check during annual exams. Most neutered males do not need prostate-specific supplements. For Older Neutered Dogs Senior dogs benefit from broader support. Omega-3s for cognitive function, joint support that may include adequan or other prescription options alongside supplements, antioxidants like vitamin E, and quality protein support muscle maintenance. Cognitive function supplements containing SAMe, phosphatidylserine, or medium-chain triglycerides have some research support for older dogs. Supplements That Are Often Overhyped Not every popular supplement is worth the money. Some categories are heavily marketed but have weaker evidence. Glandular supplements (powdered animal organ extracts) are popular in some integrative circles but have limited rigorous research in dogs. CBD has growing research but mixed quality across brands, and effects vary significantly. Greens powders for dogs are usually unnecessary for dogs eating a quality diet. Multivitamins are typically redundant if the dog is on a complete and balanced commercial diet, since these foods are already formulated to meet AAFCO nutritional standards. Collagen for dogs is heavily marketed but evidence specific to canines is limited. This doesn't mean these products are harmful, just that the return on investment is often lower than what's marketed. How to Build a Sensible Supplement Stack For most neutered males, a sensible starting point is much shorter than the average pet store would suggest. A reasonable baseline for an adult neutered male in good health: quality omega-3 supplement and that's it. For a medium or large breed dog, especially one neutered before 12 months, adding joint support makes sense. For a dog with digestive issues or recent antibiotics, a probiotic is worth adding. For a dog with confirmed anxiety after neutering, ashwagandha is reasonable to trial. For a senior, broader joint and cognitive support adds value. Most dogs don't need more than two to four supplements at any time. Stacking eight or ten products rarely improves outcomes and makes it harder to identify what's actually working. What to Look for in a Quality Supplement The supplement industry is loosely regulated. A few markers help separate real products from marketing. The National Animal Supplement Council (NASC) Quality Seal indicates the manufacturer meets basic quality and labeling standards. Veterinary-recommended brands like Nutramax, VetriScience, and Standard Process have longer track records. Products that list specific active ingredient amounts (not just proprietary blends) make it easier to assess dosing. Brands that fund or publish research in dogs are generally more credible than ones that just market heavily. Avoid products that make sweeping claims, especially anything promising to "cure" specific conditions or replace prescription treatments. When Diet Should Come Before Supplements A high-quality diet does more than any supplement stack. A neutered male on a poor diet won't be saved by supplements, and a neutered male on a quality diet often needs very few. The fundamentals come first: appropriate calorie intake for activity level (this matters a lot post-neuter), quality animal-based protein, balanced fats, and limited ultra-processed ingredients. For dogs prone to weight gain, switching to a slightly lower-calorie maintenance formula or feeding slightly smaller portions is more effective than adding any supplement. Smart Approach to Long-Term Health The best supplement strategy for neutered male dogs is targeted, not comprehensive. Identify the dog's actual risks based on breed, age at neuter, and current symptoms. Pick two to four evidence-supported products that address those specific risks. Review the stack annually with a vet and adjust as the dog ages. Most importantly, don't fall for the idea that more supplements equals better health. A quality diet, daily exercise, healthy body weight, regular vet care, and a few well-chosen supplements outperform a medicine cabinet full of products almost every time. Frequently Asked Questions Do all neutered male dogs need a supplement regimen? No. Most neutered male dogs do not need an extensive supplement regimen if they're on a complete and balanced diet. Many dogs do well with just an omega-3 supplement. Specific supplements like joint support or probiotics are added based on the individual dog's breed, age, and health status. What is the most important supplement for a neutered male dog? For most neutered male dogs, omega-3 fatty acids from fish oil are the highest-value supplement. They support joint health, skin and coat, cognitive function, and help manage inflammation, which addresses several of the most common post-neuter concerns at once. Should I give my neutered male dog joint supplements? Joint supplements containing glucosamine, chondroitin, and MSM are commonly recommended for neutered males, especially medium and large breeds neutered before 12 months. Research links early neutering to higher rates of joint disorders, so starting joint support proactively in higher-risk dogs is reasonable. Can supplements prevent weight gain after neutering? Supplements alone cannot prevent post-neuter weight gain, but L-carnitine and omega-3 fatty acids can support a healthy metabolism. The most effective approach is portion control and regular exercise, since neutered dogs typically have lower calorie needs than intact dogs. Are multivitamins necessary for neutered male dogs? Most neutered male dogs eating a complete and balanced commercial diet do not need a multivitamin, since commercial dog foods are formulated to meet AAFCO nutritional standards. Multivitamins may be useful for dogs on home-cooked diets or those with specific deficiencies confirmed by veterinary testing.  

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IGF-1 for Dogs: The Hormone Behind Energy, Muscle, and Healthy Aging

by Carly Mansfield on May 26 2026
Insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) is one of the most studied hormones in aging research, and it plays a quiet but central role in your dog's body. It drives muscle growth, supports tissue repair, regulates metabolism, and helps determine how a dog ages over time. But here's the twist that most articles get wrong: in dogs, more IGF-1 isn't necessarily better. Research has consistently shown that higher IGF-1 levels are associated with larger body size and shorter lifespans, while smaller dogs with lower IGF-1 tend to live longer. The story is more complicated than "boost this hormone for a healthier dog." Here's a clear, evidence-based look at what IGF-1 actually does in dogs, why it matters for aging, and what you can realistically do to support healthy levels rather than chase higher ones. Quick Summary IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor 1) is a hormone produced mainly in the liver in response to growth hormone. In dogs, it supports muscle development, tissue repair, metabolism, and energy regulation. Research shows that IGF-1 levels in dogs are strongly tied to body size, with larger breeds having higher levels and shorter lifespans. Excessively high IGF-1 has been linked to certain cancers in dogs, including lymphoma, while age-related declines in IGF-1 can contribute to muscle loss, fatigue, and weaker recovery in seniors. The goal isn't to maximize IGF-1, but to keep it within a healthy range for the dog's size and life stage. This is best done through quality protein nutrition, regular strength-building exercise, adequate sleep, healthy body weight, and stress management. Direct IGF-1 supplements are not appropriate for dogs and have not been studied for safety or efficacy in companion animals. What IGF-1 Actually Does in a Dog's Body IGF-1 is a peptide hormone produced primarily in the liver after growth hormone (GH) is released from the pituitary gland. Together, GH and IGF-1 form what researchers call the GH/IGF-1 axis, which controls growth during puppyhood and supports tissue maintenance throughout adult life. In adult and senior dogs, IGF-1 has several key jobs. It stimulates protein synthesis in muscle tissue, which is why it's so important for maintaining muscle mass. It supports the repair of damaged tissues after exercise, injury, or surgery. It helps regulate glucose metabolism and works alongside insulin. It plays a role in bone density and cartilage health. And it influences the immune system and inflammation balance. When IGF-1 levels drop too low, dogs can experience muscle wasting, slower recovery, reduced exercise tolerance, and changes in body composition. When they're too high or chronically elevated, the picture changes in a different direction entirely. The Body Size and Longevity Connection This is the most important part of the IGF-1 conversation in dogs, and it's where things diverge from human research. In a foundational study published in the journal Aging, researchers found that plasma IGF-1 concentrations rose dramatically with body size across breeds. Keeshounds (around 11 kg) had average IGF-1 levels of about 91 micrograms per liter. German Shepherds (around 32 kg) averaged 280. Newfoundlands (around 45 kg) had levels of nearly 390. Body weight and IGF-1 were strongly correlated in a statistically significant way. What does this mean for aging? Large breeds live shorter lives than small breeds, and elevated IGF-1 appears to be part of why. The IGF-1 axis is a well-established driver of accelerated aging across many species, including mice, fruit flies, and worms. In dogs, the same pattern shows up clearly between breeds. The University of Arizona launched a research project in 2026 called SIGNAL (Study of IGF-1, Neurocognitive Aging and Longevity) to investigate this further, particularly the relationship between IGF-1 levels and cognitive aging in medium-sized dogs. Early findings suggest that while large dogs age faster overall, their brains may age at similar rates to smaller dogs, which raises interesting questions about how IGF-1 affects different body systems differently. Why IGF-1 Drops With Age Even though larger dogs have higher baseline IGF-1, all dogs experience a gradual decline in growth hormone and IGF-1 production as they age. This is one reason older dogs commonly lose muscle mass, recover more slowly from activity, and show reduced exercise tolerance. A 2020 study in the Journal of Veterinary Science found measurable age-related changes in GH and IGF-1 markers in middle-aged and senior dogs, supporting their use as potential biomarkers for the aging process. This age-related decline is normal, but it explains why senior dogs benefit from nutritional and lifestyle approaches that support healthy IGF-1 levels rather than letting them drop too low. The goal is balance, not maximization. Signs Your Dog's IGF-1 Balance May Be Off There's no single symptom that points specifically to IGF-1 issues, because this hormone interacts with so many systems. But certain patterns can suggest the GH/IGF-1 axis isn't functioning optimally. Signs of potentially low IGF-1 activity include progressive muscle loss, especially in the hind end, slow recovery after exercise or activity, declining energy and stamina, poor coat condition, weakened immunity, and reduced exercise tolerance in senior dogs. Signs that might suggest IGF-1 levels are too high or dysregulated include accelerated aging signs in younger large-breed dogs, certain endocrine disorders (acromegaly is rare in dogs but possible), and some types of cancer development. Research from a Tufts University project specifically investigated IGF-1 levels in dogs with lymphoma, finding higher concentrations in dogs with malignant tumors compared to healthy controls. Other research has shown similar elevations in dogs with various cancers. Any concerning combination of these signs warrants veterinary bloodwork rather than home guesswork. Why You Should Not Give Your Dog IGF-1 Supplements This is worth being direct about. Direct IGF-1 supplements sold for human use (including LR3, IGF-1 DES, and deer antler velvet products marketed as "IGF-1 boosters") are not appropriate for dogs. These products have not been studied for safety or efficacy in companion animals. They're banned by most human sporting organizations due to safety concerns. Given the established link between elevated IGF-1 and cancer risk in dogs, deliberately raising IGF-1 levels in a healthy dog isn't a goal worth pursuing. The honest position is that IGF-1 is best supported through the things that influence it naturally: nutrition, exercise, sleep, and weight management. How to Support Healthy IGF-1 Naturally The good news is that the lifestyle factors that support balanced IGF-1 are the same ones that support overall canine health. Provide Quality Protein Protein intake is one of the most direct levers for IGF-1 production. Senior dogs in particular often benefit from higher-quality protein than what's typical in many maintenance diets. Animal proteins from sources like beef, poultry, fish, and eggs supply the amino acids the body uses to build muscle and produce growth factors. The goal isn't to maximize protein quantity but to ensure quality and digestibility. Older dogs without kidney disease generally do well with moderately higher protein levels than younger adult dogs, contrary to outdated advice. Include Strength-Building Exercise Resistance and load-bearing exercise stimulates the GH/IGF-1 axis. For dogs, this doesn't mean weight training in the human sense. It means activities that work the muscles against resistance: hill walks, hiking, swimming, controlled jumping, walking through grass or sand, and breed-appropriate sport activities like agility or weight-pull (for breeds suited to it). Senior dogs benefit from gentler versions of these activities. The aim is to keep muscle stimulated, not to push to exhaustion. Support Quality Sleep Growth hormone, which drives IGF-1 production, is released primarily during deep sleep. Dogs that don't get consistent, quality rest miss out on this hormonal pulse. Most adult dogs need 12 to 14 hours of total rest per day, with seniors often needing more. A quiet sleeping area, predictable routines, and minimizing nighttime disturbances all support better sleep quality. Maintain a Healthy Body Weight Both obesity and severe underweight disrupt the GH/IGF-1 axis. Overweight dogs often develop insulin resistance, which interferes with IGF-1 signaling. Underweight or malnourished dogs lack the building blocks for proper hormone production. Body condition scoring, which most veterinarians can teach in a single visit, is a more useful tool than the scale alone for tracking this. Manage Stress and Cortisol Chronically elevated cortisol from stress can suppress the GH/IGF-1 axis. Consistent routines, daily exercise, mental enrichment, and a calm home environment all help keep cortisol in check. When to See the Vet Most concerns about a dog's IGF-1 status don't require specific IGF-1 testing. The more common path is to address the symptoms that brought you to the question. If a dog is losing muscle, slowing down, or showing signs of accelerated aging, a vet visit with full bloodwork is the right next step. This typically includes thyroid testing, since thyroid function and the IGF-1 axis interact closely. For some dogs, particularly those being evaluated for growth disorders, acromegaly, or specific cancers, IGF-1 testing may be ordered directly. Vets working in endocrinology or oncology are most likely to incorporate IGF-1 testing into their workups. For general health questions, IGF-1 doesn't need to be measured directly to be supported well through lifestyle. What Healthy IGF-1 Looks Like in Practice For most dogs, supporting healthy IGF-1 isn't about hitting a specific number on a lab report. It's about helping the body do what it's built to do: build and maintain muscle, recover from activity, and respond appropriately to the demands of daily life. A dog that maintains good muscle mass into its senior years, recovers well from exercise, holds a healthy weight, and stays engaged and alert is almost certainly running a well-functioning GH/IGF-1 axis. That's the practical target. Owners who want to dig deeper can ask their vet about including IGF-1 in a senior wellness panel, but it's not a routine test for most dogs and isn't necessary to make smart day-to-day decisions about diet and activity. Closing Perspective IGF-1 sits at the intersection of energy, muscle, and aging, but it's not a hormone where more is automatically better. The dogs that live the longest tend to have lower IGF-1 levels, and excessively high levels are linked to real health concerns including certain cancers. The takeaway isn't to push IGF-1 up or down, but to provide the conditions for the body to regulate it well. Good protein, regular movement that includes some resistance, quality sleep, healthy body composition, and a low-stress environment do more than any supplement could. For owners of senior dogs especially, those daily choices are what add quality years rather than just years. Frequently Asked Questions What is IGF-1 and why does it matter for dogs? IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor 1) is a hormone produced mainly in the liver in response to growth hormone. It supports muscle growth, tissue repair, metabolism, and energy regulation in dogs. Balanced IGF-1 levels are important for healthy aging, muscle maintenance, and recovery. Should I give my dog an IGF-1 supplement? No. Direct IGF-1 supplements have not been studied for safety or efficacy in dogs, and elevated IGF-1 levels in dogs have been linked to certain cancers including lymphoma. Supporting IGF-1 naturally through diet, exercise, and sleep is the appropriate approach. Do small dogs have lower IGF-1 levels than large dogs? Yes. Research shows that IGF-1 levels in dogs correlate strongly with body size. Small breeds have significantly lower IGF-1 levels than large breeds. This is one of the reasons small dogs typically live longer than large dogs. How can I support my dog's muscle mass as they age? Combine quality animal-based protein with regular resistance-building exercise like hill walks, swimming, and breed-appropriate activity. Adequate sleep, a healthy body weight, and stress management all support the GH/IGF-1 axis, which is responsible for muscle maintenance. Veterinary bloodwork helps identify any underlying issues. Can high IGF-1 cause cancer in dogs? Research has found that elevated IGF-1 levels are associated with higher rates of certain cancers in dogs, including lymphoma. The relationship isn't fully understood as direct cause and effect, but it's why deliberately boosting IGF-1 in healthy dogs is not recommended. A vet can run testing if cancer-related concerns are present.  

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Hormone Supplements for Neutered Male Dogs: Do They Really Need One?

by Carly Mansfield on May 26 2026
A growing number of dog owners are asking a question that wasn't really on the radar ten years ago: should my neutered male dog be on some kind of hormone supplement? It's a fair question. Research over the past two decades has shown that removing the testicles doesn't just stop reproduction. It changes the hormonal environment in the body for life. Some dogs handle that change without any apparent issues. Others develop symptoms that look a lot like what humans experience with low testosterone: muscle loss, weight gain, low energy, anxiety, and joint problems. Here's an honest look at what hormone supplements for neutered male dogs actually are, who might benefit, and what the research says about whether they're worth pursuing. Quick Summary Hormone supplements for neutered male dogs are not standard veterinary care, and most neutered dogs do not need them. However, a growing body of research suggests that some dogs experience health and behavioral issues tied to the loss of testosterone after neutering, and emerging options can help. The main categories include prescription testosterone restoration (injectable testosterone cypionate, supported by a 2025 BMC Veterinary Research safety study), GnRH agonist implants like Suprelorin (deslorelin) used in some integrative protocols to lower elevated luteinizing hormone, and non-prescription supplements like flax lignans, DHEA, adaptogens, and targeted nutrients. The decision depends on the individual dog's symptoms, bloodwork, breed, and age at neuter. Most dogs benefit more from diet, exercise, and stress management than from any supplement. Why This Conversation Is Happening Now For decades, the conventional view was simple: neuter your dog early, and the only side effects worth mentioning were possible weight gain. Newer research has challenged that view. After surgery, testosterone drops to nearly zero. Because there's no testosterone left to send a feedback signal to the brain, the pituitary keeps pumping out luteinizing hormone (LH). The result is permanently elevated LH levels that can be many times higher than what an intact dog would ever have. Research from Oregon State University, led by Dr. Michelle Kutzler, has linked these elevated LH levels to a wide range of conditions including urinary incontinence, hypothyroidism, joint problems, and some cancers. That's the biological basis for the idea that hormone restoration might help certain dogs. It's also why the conversation has moved beyond "just supplement testosterone" into more nuanced protocols that also address LH. Types of Hormone Supplements and Therapies Available Hormone supplementation for neutered dogs falls into a few distinct categories. They are not interchangeable. Prescription Testosterone Replacement This is the most direct approach. Injectable testosterone cypionate at around 0.5 mg/kg administered subcutaneously once a week is the protocol described in the published research. A 2025 study published in BMC Veterinary Research found this protocol to be safe in healthy neutered dogs over a 90-day period, with testosterone levels rising into the normal range for intact dogs and no significant adverse events at standard doses. This option requires a prescription, regular bloodwork, and a veterinarian willing to oversee the protocol. It's not yet widely offered in mainstream small animal practice. GnRH Agonist Implants (Suprelorin) Suprelorin is a subcutaneous implant containing deslorelin, a GnRH agonist. It's approved in the European Union, Australia, New Zealand, and several other countries (not currently FDA-approved for general use in the United States, though it can sometimes be obtained through specific channels). Its primary marketed use is as a reversible chemical castration alternative for intact dogs. But integrative veterinarians have also used it in some neutered dogs to suppress the elevated LH levels that persist after surgery. When combined with testosterone replacement, this approach attempts to restore a more natural hormonal environment than testosterone alone. DHEA Supplementation DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone) is an adrenal hormone that the body can convert into both testosterone and estrogen. Some integrative veterinarians use DHEA for neutered dogs showing signs of adrenal-related fatigue or cognitive decline, especially in older dogs. Research in dogs is limited, and dosing varies, so it should be used under veterinary supervision. Non-Prescription Supplements These don't replace testosterone directly, but they can support hormone-related symptoms. Flax hull lignans are commonly used to help with urinary issues and may provide weak phytoestrogenic effects. Ashwagandha has clinical trial evidence in dogs for lowering cortisol and reducing anxiety, which can indirectly support endocrine balance. Adaptogenic herbs like rhodiola and schisandra are used by some integrative practitioners for stress and adrenal support. Omega-3 fatty acids and joint supplements address some of the downstream issues linked to hormone loss, like inflammation and joint degeneration. Targeted nutrients including zinc, magnesium, and B vitamins support the body's overall hormone production capacity. Signs That Hormone Support Might Be Worth Considering Most neutered dogs do fine without hormone supplements. The dogs most likely to benefit are the ones showing a pattern of symptoms that started or worsened after neutering and don't respond well to standard interventions. Common signs include unexplained muscle loss or difficulty maintaining muscle mass, weight gain that doesn't resolve with diet changes, progressive loss of energy or stamina, increased anxiety or fearfulness that wasn't present before, urinary incontinence (less common in males than females but it occurs), recurring joint stiffness despite joint supplements, coat thinning or texture changes, and cognitive changes in older dogs. A pattern is more meaningful than any single symptom. A dog showing two or three of these together is more likely to have a hormone-related issue than one with just one symptom. What Bloodwork Actually Tells You Before adding any hormone supplement to a dog's routine, bloodwork is the most important step. Useful tests include testosterone levels, luteinizing hormone (LH), thyroid panel (T4, free T4, TSH), and a full adrenal panel if symptoms point in that direction. The University of Tennessee's endocrine lab is one of the most-referenced facilities for adrenal panels in dogs, including detailed sex hormone analysis. Some neutered dogs show very low testosterone (expected) but also abnormally elevated estradiol, which complicates the picture and changes the right protocol. Without bloodwork, hormone supplementation is guesswork. With it, treatment can be targeted to what's actually out of balance. Risks and Side Effects to Know About Hormone supplementation is not risk-free. Possible side effects of testosterone administration in dogs include increased liver enzymes, skin changes, increased male sexual behavior, perianal adenomas, and prostate effects. The 2025 safety study reported one dog in the study group having two seizures during the trial, though that dog had a pre-existing seizure disorder. DHEA can affect adrenal balance and isn't appropriate for every dog. Suprelorin causes an initial "flare" of increased hormone activity before suppression kicks in, which can temporarily worsen behavior in some dogs. Non-prescription supplements carry their own risks. Quality varies widely, and some products contain ingredients (like soy or thyroid glandulars) that can cause problems in dogs without a confirmed need. Looking for products carrying the National Animal Supplement Council (NASC) Quality Seal is one way to filter for basic manufacturing standards. What Should Come Before Hormone Supplementation For most neutered dogs experiencing post-neuter issues, the highest-impact changes don't involve hormone supplements at all. A whole-food, nutrient-dense diet with adequate protein supports muscle maintenance and metabolic function. Daily exercise (especially strength-building activities like hill walks, swimming, and hiking) helps preserve muscle and supports natural hormone balance. Weight management has an outsized effect on inflammation, joint health, and overall hormone signaling. Joint supplements with proven ingredients (glucosamine, chondroitin, MSM, omega-3s) help with one of the most common post-neuter complaints. Stress reduction through consistent routines and reduced household chemical exposure supports endocrine balance broadly. If these foundations are already in place and the dog still shows symptoms, that's when hormone-specific options become more reasonable to explore. How to Talk to Your Vet About This Many general-practice veterinarians aren't deeply familiar with the spay-neuter syndrome research or with hormone restoration protocols. That's not a criticism, it's just where the field is. If your vet isn't comfortable with this area, it's worth seeking out a veterinarian who specifically works with integrative medicine, endocrinology, or hormone-sparing approaches. The Parsemus Foundation maintains a directory of veterinarians who offer hormone restoration and related protocols. The American Holistic Veterinary Medical Association is another starting point. Be ready with your dog's symptom history, any prior bloodwork, and clear questions about what testing the vet recommends before considering any intervention. The Honest Answer Most neutered male dogs don't need hormone supplements. The vast majority do well with a quality diet, regular exercise, weight management, and breed-appropriate preventive care. For the smaller group of dogs experiencing real symptoms tied to hormone loss, options have expanded significantly in the past few years. The 2025 BMC Veterinary Research safety study on testosterone restoration was a meaningful step forward, and ongoing research is filling in the gaps. But these are individualized treatments, not something to start on a hunch. If you suspect your dog falls into the group that might benefit, the right next steps are simple: track the symptoms, run a full hormone panel, and work with a vet who's actually read the recent literature. That's a more useful path than reaching for a supplement bottle without knowing what you're treating. Frequently Asked Questions Do all neutered male dogs need hormone supplements? No. Most neutered male dogs do not need hormone supplements and live healthy lives without them. Hormone support is typically considered only for dogs showing specific symptoms like muscle loss, persistent anxiety, weight gain that won't resolve, or incontinence, and only after bloodwork confirms a hormonal imbalance. What is the best hormone supplement for a neutered male dog? There isn't a single best option. For confirmed low testosterone with clinical symptoms, weekly injectable testosterone cypionate (0.5 mg/kg) is the most evidence-supported prescription protocol based on a 2025 BMC Veterinary Research study. For dogs not yet at the prescription stage, ashwagandha, omega-3s, and joint supplements address some related symptoms. The right choice depends on what bloodwork shows. Is testosterone replacement therapy legal for dogs? Yes, testosterone replacement is legal in most countries when prescribed by a licensed veterinarian. It's an off-label use rather than a standard treatment, so it requires a vet willing to oversee the protocol. Finding a veterinarian comfortable with the research is usually the bigger hurdle than legality. Can I give my dog over-the-counter testosterone boosters? No. Human testosterone-boosting supplements are not formulated for dogs and may contain ingredients that are unsafe or ineffective for them. Some, like certain herbs or high-dose minerals, can cause harm. Any hormone-related supplementation should go through a veterinarian. How long does it take for hormone supplements to work in dogs? For prescription testosterone replacement, blood testosterone levels rise within days, but visible changes in muscle mass, energy, and mood typically take six to twelve weeks. The case study published in Topics in Companion Animal Medicine documented improvements in muscle mass and mobility at around 95 days. Non-prescription supplements like ashwagandha may show effects within four weeks based on clinical trial data.  

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How to Support Your Dog's Endocrine System Naturally

by Carly Mansfield on May 26 2026
Your dog's endocrine system runs quietly in the background, regulating everything from energy levels and mood to weight, immunity, reproduction, and how well they sleep. When it's working, you barely notice it. When it starts slipping, the signs show up everywhere at once: weight gain that won't budge, a dull coat, anxiety, low energy, or skin issues that keep cycling back. The good news is that the endocrine system responds well to lifestyle changes. Diet, exercise, stress management, and reducing chemical exposure all influence how hormones are produced, balanced, and cleared from the body. Here's how to support your dog's endocrine health using natural, evidence-backed approaches. Quick Summary Supporting your dog's endocrine system naturally comes down to a few core pillars: feed a whole-food, nutrient-dense diet rich in quality protein and healthy fats, reduce exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) found in plastics, lawn pesticides, and some flame retardants, manage stress through exercise and consistent routines, and consider targeted supplements where there's research support. Omega-3 fatty acids, ashwagandha (which has clinical trial data showing it lowers cortisol in dogs), selenium, iodine from sources like kelp, and probiotics for gut-hormone balance are among the most evidence-supported options. These approaches don't replace veterinary care for diagnosed endocrine diseases like hypothyroidism, Cushing's, or diabetes, but they can support overall hormonal health and may help prevent issues from developing. What the Endocrine System Actually Does The endocrine system is a network of glands that produce and release hormones into the bloodstream. The main players in your dog's body include the thyroid (metabolism and energy), adrenals (stress response and inflammation), pancreas (blood sugar via insulin), pituitary (the master gland that controls many others), and gonads (reproductive and sex hormones, when present). These glands communicate through feedback loops. When one is disrupted, the others often shift in response. That's why a thyroid problem can cause weight gain, skin issues, and behavioral changes all at once, and why chronic stress can eventually affect immune function, digestion, and metabolism. Supporting one part of this system rarely works in isolation. The strongest approach is usually one that addresses the whole network through diet, environment, and lifestyle. Start With Diet: The Foundation of Hormonal Health Hormones are built from nutrients. Steroid hormones like cortisol and testosterone come from cholesterol. Thyroid hormones require iodine, selenium, zinc, and tyrosine. Without the raw materials, the endocrine system can't function properly. Prioritize Whole-Food Proteins High-quality animal proteins supply the amino acids dogs need to build hormones. Grass-fed beef, pasture-raised poultry, wild-caught fish, and organ meats are nutrient-dense options. Organ meats in particular are rich in vitamin A, B vitamins, selenium, and zinc, which all play roles in hormone production. Include Healthy Fats Cholesterol isn't the enemy. It's the precursor to every steroid hormone in the body. Fats from fish, eggs, coconut oil, and flaxseed provide both the structural material for hormones and essential fatty acids that reduce inflammation. Omega-3s in particular are well-studied for their role in supporting metabolic and thyroid health. Add Micronutrient-Rich Vegetables Leafy greens, squash, carrots, and berries supply antioxidants and trace minerals. These nutrients support detoxification pathways that clear used hormones from the body, which is just as important as making new ones. Limit Ultra-Processed Foods Many heavily processed kibbles contain refined carbohydrates and synthetic additives that can stress the metabolic system. They're not inherently harmful for every dog, but a diet built largely around them gives the endocrine system less to work with than a diet centered on whole foods. Reduce Exposure to Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals This is one of the most overlooked aspects of canine endocrine health. A 2023 review published in the journal Animals examined how endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) affect pet dogs and cats, finding links between EDC exposure and thyroid disorders, reproductive issues, diabetes, and certain cancers. Researchers note that dogs share our environment so closely that they're now studied as biological sentinels for human exposure. Common sources of EDCs in a dog's daily life include lawn pesticides and herbicides, plastic food and water bowls (BPA and phthalates), flame retardants on furniture and bedding, household cleaners with synthetic fragrances, flea and tick treatments with strong organophosphates, and unfiltered tap water. Practical steps that reduce exposure include switching to stainless steel or ceramic bowls, using a water filter, choosing fragrance-free or naturally scented cleaners, washing pet bedding in mild detergent, avoiding lawn chemicals or keeping dogs off treated grass for the recommended interval, and choosing topical pest treatments thoughtfully with vet guidance. You don't have to overhaul everything at once. Even reducing the highest-exposure sources (food bowls, drinking water, lawn chemicals) makes a meaningful difference over time. Support the Gut, Support the Hormones The gut and endocrine system are tightly connected. The gut microbiome influences how hormones are produced, metabolized, and cleared from the body. It also plays a major role in thyroid function (a portion of T4 is converted to active T3 in the gut) and in cortisol regulation through the gut-brain axis. Approaches that support gut health and indirectly support hormones include feeding fermented foods or quality probiotics, providing prebiotic fibers from foods like pumpkin or chicory root, avoiding unnecessary antibiotic use, and limiting foods that cause persistent inflammation in your specific dog (these vary by individual). A healthy gut also helps the liver clear hormones more efficiently, which prevents the buildup of estrogen metabolites and other compounds that can throw the system off balance. Manage Stress and Cortisol Chronic stress is one of the most underestimated drivers of endocrine dysfunction in dogs. Persistently elevated cortisol can suppress thyroid function, disrupt blood sugar regulation, weaken the immune system, and contribute to behavioral problems. Daily Exercise Regular physical activity helps regulate cortisol, supports healthy metabolism, and improves insulin sensitivity. The right amount depends on the dog's breed, age, and health, but most dogs benefit from at least one solid period of movement daily, with mental stimulation built in. Consistent Routines Dogs thrive on predictability. Consistent feeding times, walks, and rest periods help regulate the natural cortisol rhythm, which peaks in the morning and tapers through the day. Adaptogenic Herbs Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) is the most clinically studied adaptogen in dogs. A 2022 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial published in the Journal of Veterinary Behavior found that dogs receiving 15 mg/kg of standardized ashwagandha root extract daily for four weeks showed significant reductions in urine cortisol levels and improvements in fear and anxiety scores compared to placebo. A 2024 study in geriatric dogs found similar benefits along with anti-inflammatory effects. Other adaptogens used in integrative veterinary practice include rhodiola and schisandra, though research in dogs is more limited. Calm Environments Reducing chronic stressors at home (constant noise, isolation, unpredictable interactions, or persistent conflict with other pets) does as much for endocrine health as any supplement. Targeted Nutrients That Support Specific Glands While whole-food nutrition is the foundation, specific nutrients are tied to specific glands. These should be used thoughtfully and ideally with veterinary input, especially if your dog has an existing condition. For Thyroid Support Iodine is essential for thyroid hormone production, and sea vegetables like kelp and bladderwrack are natural sources. Selenium helps convert inactive T4 into active T3. Zinc and tyrosine also play roles. Important caveat: supplementing iodine or thyroid glandulars in a dog without a confirmed need can cause problems, so testing comes first. For Adrenal Support The adrenals handle stress hormone production. B vitamins, vitamin C, magnesium, and adaptogens like ashwagandha all support adrenal function. Avoiding chronic stress is the bigger lever here than any supplement. For Pancreatic and Metabolic Support Omega-3 fatty acids, chromium, and fiber-rich foods help support insulin sensitivity and stable blood sugar. For overweight dogs or those with insulin resistance, weight management is the single most impactful intervention. For Sex Hormone Balance For spayed or neutered dogs, phytoestrogens from flax lignans, evening primrose oil, and (with veterinary guidance) red clover or chasteberry are sometimes used to support hormonal balance. These don't replace lost sex hormones but may help with related symptoms like incontinence or coat changes. When Natural Support Isn't Enough Lifestyle and nutrition can do a lot, but they have limits. Conditions that need veterinary diagnosis and often prescription treatment include hypothyroidism (treated with levothyroxine), Cushing's disease, Addison's disease, diabetes mellitus, and significant urinary incontinence in spayed dogs. Signs that warrant a vet visit rather than a supplement trial include sudden or significant weight changes, excessive thirst and urination, persistent skin or coat changes, unexplained behavioral shifts, lethargy that doesn't resolve, or any combination of symptoms that's worsening. A baseline blood panel including thyroid testing is one of the most useful tools for catching endocrine problems early. For middle-aged and senior dogs, annual or semi-annual bloodwork is worth the investment. Building a Practical Daily Routine Most owners do better with a simple, sustainable routine than a complicated protocol they can't maintain. A reasonable starting point looks something like this: a whole-food or minimally processed diet with quality protein and added omega-3s, filtered water in a stainless steel bowl, daily exercise and mental stimulation, a consistent feeding and sleep schedule, reduced household chemical exposure, and targeted supplements only where there's a clear reason to add them. From there, you can layer in more specific interventions based on your dog's individual needs, age, breed, and any post-spay or post-neuter considerations. Final Thoughts The endocrine system isn't fragile, but it does respond to everything you put in front of your dog: their food, their environment, their stress levels, and their daily routine. Supporting it naturally is less about chasing the perfect supplement and more about building a daily environment where the body can do its job. Most of the highest-impact changes are free or low-cost. Better food choices, more consistent exercise, fewer household chemicals, and a calmer home environment will move the needle further than most products on the shelf. Add evidence-supported supplements where they fit, work with a vet who actually tests rather than guesses, and you'll have a strong foundation for long-term hormonal health. Frequently Asked Questions What are the signs of endocrine problems in dogs? Common signs include unexplained weight gain or loss, excessive thirst or urination, hair loss or coat changes, lethargy, skin problems, behavioral changes, and exercise intolerance. Many endocrine conditions share overlapping symptoms, so bloodwork is needed to identify the specific issue. Can diet alone fix a dog's hormone imbalance? Diet is foundational, but it usually can't fix a diagnosed endocrine disease on its own. Conditions like hypothyroidism, Cushing's, or diabetes typically need prescription treatment. Diet can support overall hormonal health, help prevent issues from worsening, and complement medical treatment. Is ashwagandha safe for dogs? Clinical studies in dogs have shown that standardized ashwagandha root extract (around 15 mg/kg daily) is generally well-tolerated and effective at reducing cortisol and anxiety markers. It should be used under veterinary guidance, especially for dogs on other medications, pregnant dogs, or dogs with autoimmune conditions. What household products disrupt a dog's endocrine system? Common endocrine-disrupting products include lawn pesticides and herbicides, plastic food bowls (BPA and phthalates), synthetic fragrances, certain flame retardants on furniture, and some commercial cleaners. Switching to stainless steel bowls, filtered water, and fragrance-free cleaners reduces daily exposure. How often should I get my dog's hormones tested? For healthy adult dogs, a baseline thyroid and metabolic panel during annual exams is a good practice. Middle-aged, senior, or spayed and neutered dogs may benefit from more frequent testing, especially if symptoms appear. Discuss the right testing schedule for your dog's age and breed with your veterinarian.  

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Is There a Supplement for Spayed Dog Problems?

by Carly Mansfield on May 26 2026
If you've noticed changes in your dog after her spay surgery, you're not imagining things. Weight gain, urinary leaks, anxiety, joint stiffness, or a duller coat after spaying are real and well-documented. The good news is that several of these issues can be managed, and supplements are often part of the conversation. Here's a straight look at what spayed dog problems actually are, which supplements have evidence behind them, and where supplements stop being enough. Quick Summary Yes, there are supplements that may help with common problems in spayed dogs, but the right supplement depends on the specific issue. For urinary incontinence, products containing phytoestrogens (from soy isoflavones, wild yam, or flax lignans) along with pumpkin seed and cranberry are the most commonly recommended. For weight management and metabolism, omega-3 fatty acids and L-carnitine are often used. For joint problems, glucosamine, chondroitin, MSM, and omega-3s have the strongest research base. For anxiety or behavioral changes, adaptogens like ashwagandha and L-theanine are common. For thyroid support, selenium, iodine, and zinc are sometimes recommended alongside veterinary diagnosis. Supplements should be paired with a vet exam to identify the actual cause of the problem, since some symptoms point to conditions that need prescription treatment rather than over-the-counter support. Why Spayed Dogs Develop Health Problems Spaying removes the ovaries (and usually the uterus), which eliminates the body's main source of estrogen and progesterone. The result is a permanent change to the dog's hormone profile. Luteinizing hormone (LH) rises and stays elevated, sometimes up to 30 times higher than in intact dogs, because there's no estrogen signal telling the pituitary to slow down. LH receptors are found throughout the body, including in the bladder, thyroid, immune tissue, and joints. Researchers at Oregon State University, led by Dr. Michelle Kutzler, have linked this hormonal shift to several conditions that show up more often in spayed dogs. Most spayed dogs live long, healthy lives. But for the ones that develop problems, the cause is usually traceable to that hormonal shift or to its downstream effects on metabolism, behavior, and tissue health. The Most Common Spayed Dog Problems Urinary Incontinence This is the most well-known issue. Estrogen helps maintain urethral sphincter tone, and when estrogen drops, the sphincter can weaken. The condition is called urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence (USMI). It often shows up as urine leaking while the dog sleeps or rests. Weight Gain and Slower Metabolism Spayed dogs are more likely to gain weight than intact dogs. A 2024 study published in PMC documented changes in metabolic hormones after spaying, including decreased nesfatin-1, serotonin, and T4, along with increased TSH. These shifts help explain why caloric needs drop after spaying. Joint Disorders A 2020 UC Davis study covering 35 breeds found that early spaying (before 12 months) increased joint disorder rates significantly in many medium and large breeds. Hip dysplasia, cranial cruciate ligament tears, and elbow dysplasia were the most commonly affected conditions. Hypothyroidism According to VCA Animal Hospitals, hypothyroidism may be more common in spayed females and neutered males. Symptoms include weight gain, lethargy, hair loss, dry coat, and skin issues. Anxiety and Behavioral Changes Research published in 2014 on gonadectomized Vizslas found that the younger the age at spay or neuter, the earlier the onset of behavioral disorders like fear of storms. Some spayed dogs become more anxious or reactive, particularly when spayed before behavioral maturity. Coat and Skin Changes Hair loss, thinning, or coat texture changes (sometimes called "spay coat") are reported in some breeds, likely tied to hormone-related changes in hair follicle cycles. Certain Cancers While spaying reduces the risk of mammary tumors and eliminates ovarian and uterine cancers, some research links spaying to increased risk of hemangiosarcoma, lymphoma, mast cell tumors, and osteosarcoma in specific breeds, particularly when done early. Supplements That May Help, Issue by Issue For Urinary Incontinence Phytoestrogens are the most studied non-prescription option. These are plant compounds that mimic some of estrogen's effects on the bladder. Common ingredients include soy isoflavones, wild yam extract, flax hull lignans, and pumpkin seed powder. Products like VetriScience Bladder Strength, Nutri-Vet Bladder Control Chewables, and VetClassics Incontinence Formula combine several of these ingredients. Cranberry and D-mannose are often added to support overall urinary tract health, though they don't directly address sphincter tone. It's important to know that for moderate to severe incontinence, supplements alone may not be enough. Prescription options include Incurin (estriol), a low-dose estrogen, and phenylpropanolamine (PPA), which strengthens the urethral sphincter. These tend to be more effective than supplements in serious cases. For Weight Gain and Metabolism Omega-3 fatty acids (fish oil) support a healthy metabolism and reduce inflammation. L-carnitine is sometimes included in weight management diets and supplements because it helps the body use fat for energy. A high-protein, controlled-calorie diet paired with regular exercise is typically more impactful than any single supplement. For Joint Health This is one of the strongest evidence categories. Glucosamine and chondroitin support cartilage health, and MSM has anti-inflammatory effects. Omega-3 fatty acids from fish oil are well-supported for reducing joint inflammation. Green-lipped mussel is another commonly used option. For larger or older spayed dogs, joint supplements are often started before symptoms appear because of the elevated lifetime risk. For Thyroid Support Supplements containing selenium, iodine, zinc, and ashwagandha may support thyroid function, but they do not replace thyroid medication for a dog with diagnosed hypothyroidism. The standard treatment is a daily oral thyroid hormone replacement (levothyroxine). Always run thyroid bloodwork before starting any thyroid supplement, because supplementing iodine or thyroid glandulars in a dog without a deficiency can cause problems. For Anxiety and Behavior Ashwagandha is an adaptogenic herb sometimes used to help dogs manage stress. L-theanine, found in products like Anxitane and Composure, has research supporting its calming effects in dogs. CBD products are widely used, though research is still developing. None of these replace behavioral training or a proper veterinary workup for serious anxiety. For Coat and Skin Omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, biotin, zinc, and vitamin E are the most common ingredients in skin and coat supplements. Evening primrose oil is also used to support skin barrier function. What Supplements Cannot Do Supplements can support a dog's overall health and address some symptoms, but they have limits. They cannot replace lost ovarian hormones the way prescription hormone therapy can. They cannot cure hypothyroidism, only support thyroid health in general. They cannot reverse joint damage that's already happened, only slow its progression. And they are not regulated as drugs in the United States, which means quality varies widely between brands. Looking for products that carry the National Animal Supplement Council (NASC) Quality Seal is one way to filter for brands that meet basic manufacturing standards. Anything beyond that requires reading labels, checking ingredient sources, and ideally getting a vet's input. When to See the Vet Instead of Reaching for a Supplement Some symptoms in spayed dogs need a proper diagnosis before any supplement is added to the routine. A sudden onset of incontinence, especially in a young dog, deserves a urinalysis to rule out infection. Unexplained weight gain combined with lethargy and hair loss could indicate hypothyroidism that needs prescription treatment. Joint pain that's worsening fast needs imaging. Significant behavior changes warrant a full workup, since pain often shows up as anxiety or aggression. Blood in the urine, frequent UTIs, or straining to urinate are not incontinence problems and need vet attention. A general rule: if a symptom is mild, recent, and clearly tied to the spay, a targeted supplement is reasonable to try for a few weeks. If a symptom is worsening, severe, or unclear, a vet visit comes first. The Bottom Line There isn't a single supplement that fixes everything related to spaying, but there are well-supported options for most of the specific problems that come up. The biggest wins for spayed dogs tend to come from a combination of approaches: a quality diet, weight management, the right targeted supplements, regular exercise, and a vet who keeps current with the research on post-spay health. Start by identifying the actual problem, get bloodwork if anything seems systemic, and then choose supplements based on what your dog actually needs rather than what's marketed loudest. Frequently Asked Questions What is the best supplement for spayed dog incontinence? Supplements containing phytoestrogens like soy isoflavones, wild yam, or flax lignans, often combined with pumpkin seed and cranberry, are the most commonly recommended for spayed dog incontinence. For moderate to severe cases, prescription options like Incurin (estriol) or phenylpropanolamine (PPA) are usually more effective. Can supplements help a spayed dog lose weight? Supplements alone won't drive weight loss, but omega-3 fatty acids and L-carnitine can support a healthy metabolism when paired with a calorie-controlled diet and regular exercise. Weight gain after spaying is mostly tied to lower energy needs, so portion control is the biggest lever. Do spayed dogs need hormone replacement therapy? Most spayed dogs do not need hormone replacement therapy. HRT is not standard veterinary care, but it can be considered for dogs with severe symptoms tied to hormone loss, like persistent incontinence or significant behavioral changes. It should only be pursued with a vet familiar with the current research. Are joint supplements important for spayed dogs? Joint supplements are often recommended for spayed dogs, especially medium and large breeds spayed before 12 months, because research links early spaying to higher rates of hip dysplasia and cranial cruciate ligament injuries. Glucosamine, chondroitin, MSM, and omega-3 fatty acids are the most evidence-supported options. Is it safe to give my spayed dog supplements without consulting a vet? For mild, well-understood issues like a basic joint supplement or fish oil, many owners start without a vet visit. But for symptoms that could point to a real medical condition, like incontinence, lethargy, or coat changes, a vet should rule out underlying issues first. Supplements can also interact with medications, so a vet check is the safer route for any dog on prescription drugs.  

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Do Neutered Male Dogs Need Hormone Support? What the Research Shows

by Carly Mansfield on May 26 2026
If you've ever wondered whether your neutered male dog is missing something important after surgery, you're not alone. More pet owners and veterinarians are asking the same question, and the research from the past decade is changing how we think about it. Removing the testicles doesn't just stop reproduction. It also shuts down the primary source of testosterone and estrogen in a male dog's body. That loss has knock-on effects that researchers are still mapping out, and a small but growing field of veterinary medicine is exploring whether some of those effects can be reversed. Here's what the current evidence actually says. Quick Summary Research suggests that neutered male dogs may benefit from hormone support, but the science is still developing. Studies show neutering can increase the risk of certain cancers, joint disorders, obesity, urinary incontinence, hypothyroidism, and anxiety-related behaviors, particularly in larger breeds neutered before one year of age. A 2025 safety study published in BMC Veterinary Research found that injectable testosterone can safely restore normal hormone levels in neutered dogs over a three-month period. However, hormone replacement therapy for dogs is not yet standard veterinary practice, and most dogs do well after neutering without any intervention. The decision should be made with a veterinarian based on the individual dog's breed, age at neuter, symptoms, and bloodwork. What Actually Happens When a Male Dog Is Neutered Neutering, technically called orchiectomy or castration, removes the testes. The testes are the main producer of testosterone in a male dog. They also produce small amounts of estradiol, a form of estrogen. When those organs are removed, testosterone drops to near zero. The body responds with a hormonal feedback loop: the pituitary gland keeps releasing luteinizing hormone (LH) because there's no testosterone signal telling it to stop. The result is chronically elevated LH levels that can be much higher than what an intact dog would ever have. This matters because LH receptors are found throughout the body, including in joints, the thyroid, the bladder, and immune tissue. Researchers now believe this hormonal imbalance is part of why neutered dogs face higher risks for certain health conditions. The Health Effects Linked to Hormone Loss A growing body of peer-reviewed research has connected neutering to several health outcomes. Not every dog experiences these issues, but the statistical patterns are clear. Joint Disorders A 2013 study of Golden Retrievers found that early-neutered males had double the rate of hip dysplasia compared to intact males. Cranial cruciate ligament tears, which were not seen in any intact male in the study, occurred in 5 percent of early-neutered males. A larger 2020 UC Davis study covering 35 breeds confirmed that for many medium and large breeds, neutering before 12 months of age was associated with joint disorder rates two to four times higher than in intact dogs. Small breeds showed no significant increase in joint problems. Certain Cancers The same UC Davis research and other studies have linked neutering to elevated risk of specific cancers, including lymphoma, hemangiosarcoma, mast cell tumors, and osteosarcoma. One study on Rottweilers found that neutering before age one was associated with three to four times the rate of osteosarcoma compared to intact dogs. Prostate cancer is another concern. Research shows that neutered males develop prostate carcinoma about four times more often than intact males, even though neutering reduces the risk of benign prostate enlargement. Obesity and Metabolism Multiple studies confirm that neutered dogs are more likely to gain weight than intact dogs. A 2024 study published in PMC found that neutering decreased levels of nesfatin-1, serotonin, and T4 while increasing TSH levels in both male and female dogs. These hormonal shifts are part of the mechanism behind post-neuter weight gain. Hypothyroidism Older, heavier, and neutered dogs are more likely to develop hypothyroidism. The hormonal disruption from neutering may interfere with normal thyroid function over time. Urinary Incontinence This is more commonly studied in females, but it can occur in males as well. The condition is linked to the loss of sex hormones that help maintain bladder and urethral sphincter function. Behavioral Changes Research published in 2018 involving more than 6,000 male dogs found that dogs allowed to mature hormonally before sterilization showed fewer behavioral problems related to fear and aggression. Some neutered dogs develop increased anxiety, fearfulness, or reactivity, which integrative veterinarians attribute in part to the loss of testosterone's role in emotional stability. What the Research Says About Hormone Restoration Until recently, restoring hormones in already-neutered dogs was rarely studied. That has started to change. The 2021 Case Study A case report published in Topics in Companion Animal Medicine documented the first published account of hormone restoration therapy in a neutered male dog. The dog, a mixed breed named Toby, had been castrated at seven months and developed mobility problems, weight gain, and anxiety. Treatment with testosterone and a GnRH agonist implant restored his hormone levels to normal ranges, improved his mobility, and reduced his anxiety. The authors stressed that a single case cannot be generalized and called for controlled clinical trials. The 2025 Safety Study In June 2025, the Parsemus Foundation published a study in BMC Veterinary Research on the safety and dosing of injectable testosterone in neutered male dogs. Twelve neutered dogs received either no testosterone, the standard weekly dose, three times that dose, or five times that dose for 90 days. The study found that testosterone therapy at all tested doses raised hormone levels into the normal range for intact dogs without significant changes to most health parameters. The researchers concluded that weekly injectable testosterone over three months appears safe in healthy neutered dogs. The study had limitations, including small sample size and no long-term follow up, and one dog with a pre-existing seizure disorder had two seizures during the trial. This study is significant because it provides the first formal safety and dosing framework for veterinarians considering testosterone restoration. Hormone replacement therapy is still not standard care, but the evidence base is growing. Natural and Nutritional Hormone Support For owners who want to support their dog without prescription hormone therapy, several non-pharmaceutical approaches are commonly discussed by integrative veterinarians. These have less rigorous research behind them than prescription hormone therapy, and results vary. Approaches that come up in the integrative veterinary literature include thyroid support when bloodwork shows a deficiency, adaptogenic herbs like ashwagandha for cortisol regulation, lignans from flax hulls (sometimes used for hormone-related incontinence), evening primrose oil, and a nutrient-dense whole-food diet to provide the building blocks for hormone production. Joint supplements and weight management are also widely recommended for neutered dogs because of their elevated risk of joint problems and obesity. Any supplement plan should be reviewed by a veterinarian, especially for dogs on other medications or with existing health conditions. Should You Pursue Hormone Support for Your Dog? There's no single answer. Most neutered dogs live long, healthy lives without any hormone intervention. The decision depends on several factors: The dog's breed and size matter. Large breeds neutered young show the strongest links to joint and cancer risks. Symptoms matter. A dog with unexplained anxiety, muscle loss, weight gain, lethargy, or recurring incontinence may benefit from a hormone workup. Bloodwork matters. Testing testosterone, LH, thyroid hormones, and adrenal hormones gives a clearer picture than guessing. And the dog's overall health matters, since hormone therapy is not appropriate for every dog. This is a conversation to have with a veterinarian, ideally one familiar with the current research on spay-neuter syndrome. Integrative and holistic veterinarians often have more experience with hormone restoration protocols, but a growing number of conventional vets are paying attention to this research as well. The Bottom Line The research is clear that neutering changes more than reproductive ability. It alters the endocrine system in ways that can affect joint health, cancer risk, weight, thyroid function, and behavior over a dog's lifetime. What's less clear, but rapidly developing, is whether and when hormone support should be part of the standard care plan for neutered dogs. Early evidence from case reports and the 2025 safety study suggests that hormone restoration is feasible and can be safe, but large controlled trials are still needed. For now, the most defensible position is informed monitoring. Know the risks for your dog's breed, watch for symptoms, run bloodwork when something seems off, and work with a vet who keeps up with the research. Frequently Asked Questions Do all neutered male dogs need hormone replacement therapy? No. Most neutered dogs do well without hormone therapy, and HRT is not currently standard veterinary care. Hormone support is generally considered for dogs showing specific symptoms like unexplained muscle loss, anxiety, incontinence, or metabolic changes after neutering, and only after bloodwork confirms a hormonal imbalance. Is testosterone therapy safe for neutered dogs? A 2025 study published in BMC Veterinary Research found that weekly injectable testosterone cypionate was safe in healthy neutered dogs over a 90-day period at doses up to five times the standard. Long-term safety has not yet been established in large trials, and the therapy should only be administered under veterinary supervision. What are the signs my neutered dog might have low hormones? Common signs include weight gain that won't respond to diet changes, muscle loss, lethargy, urinary incontinence, increased anxiety or fearfulness, thinning coat, joint stiffness, or cognitive changes in older dogs. Bloodwork is needed to confirm whether hormones are actually low. Are large breed dogs more affected by neutering than small breeds? Yes. Research from UC Davis covering 35 breeds found that larger breeds, especially those over 20 kilograms, show significantly higher rates of joint disorders and some cancers when neutered before one year of age. Small breeds generally show little to no increased risk of joint problems from early neutering. Can natural supplements replace hormone therapy in neutered dogs? Supplements like flax lignans, evening primrose oil, ashwagandha, and thyroid support are commonly used by integrative veterinarians, but they have less rigorous research behind them than prescription hormone therapy. They may help with specific issues like mild incontinence or stress, but they do not directly replace testosterone or estrogen. A vet should be consulted before starting any supplement protocol.  

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Hormone Loss in Spayed and Neutered Dogs: The Science Explained

by Carly Mansfield on May 08 2026
A Quick Read Before the Deep Dive When a dog is spayed or neutered, the surgery removes the body's primary source of certain reproductive hormones. The biological consequences extend well beyond reproduction because those hormones also act on tissues throughout the body. This post walks through what science currently understands about that hormonal shift, written for owners who want the real explanation rather than a marketing version of it. Why the Science Here Is Worth Understanding Most owners are told their dog will "recover in a couple of weeks" after spay or neuter surgery and never hear another word about hormones. That is a fine framing for the surgical recovery itself, but it leaves out the longer biological story. The reproductive system is part of the endocrine system, which is the network of glands that produce and release hormones. When the ovaries or testes are removed, the dog is not just losing the ability to reproduce. She is losing the body's primary source of estrogen and progesterone (in females) or testosterone (in males), and that change cascades into other systems because those hormones do not only act on reproductive tissues. Understanding the science here is not academic. It is the difference between treating post-surgical changes as mysterious quirks of aging and recognizing them as the predictable downstream effects of a permanent endocrine shift. How the Endocrine System Works in an Intact Dog Before getting into what changes after surgery, it helps to know what the system looks like when it is running normally. The hypothalamus, a region at the base of the brain, releases a chemical called gonadotropin-releasing hormone, or GnRH. GnRH travels a short distance to the pituitary gland, which then releases two key hormones into the bloodstream: luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). These pituitary hormones travel to the gonads (ovaries in females, testes in males) and stimulate them to produce the sex hormones the dog actually uses: estrogen and progesterone in females, testosterone in males. Those sex hormones travel throughout the body, doing their various jobs, and the system uses negative feedback to keep itself balanced. When sex hormone levels are high enough, signals tell the hypothalamus and pituitary to slow GnRH and LH release. When levels drop, the signals reverse and production picks back up. It is a self-regulating loop, and it works the same way in every healthy mammal. What Changes When the Gonads Are Removed This is the heart of the science. When the ovaries or testes are removed, the gonadal source of sex hormones is gone permanently. The body still has small amounts of estrogen and testosterone produced by the adrenal glands and other tissues, but those amounts are a fraction of what the gonads were providing. The negative feedback loop also breaks. Without sex hormones telling the hypothalamus and pituitary to slow down, those glands keep releasing GnRH and LH. Over time, LH levels in altered dogs settle at concentrations significantly higher than what is normal in intact dogs, because there is no feedback signal telling the system to stop. This persistently elevated LH is one of the most important findings in modern post-surgical canine endocrinology, and it is the area where Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University has done some of the most cited work. Her published research has documented that LH receptors are present in many non-reproductive tissues, including the thyroid gland, adrenal glands, gastrointestinal tract, cranial cruciate ligament, lymphocytes, and bladder. She has also identified LH receptors in certain neoplastic tissues. The fact that these receptors exist in tissues throughout the body has reframed the conversation about long-term post-surgical health, because it offers a plausible mechanism for why altered dogs can develop a wider range of issues than the surgical procedure alone would suggest. Sex hormones themselves also do far more than support reproduction. Estrogen plays roles in bone density, urinary tract function, skin elasticity, cardiovascular health, and metabolic regulation. Testosterone supports muscle mass, bone strength, and certain aspects of mood and cognition. When those hormones are no longer produced in normal amounts, the tissues that relied on them have to operate without that support. What the Research Has Documented Several lines of veterinary research have built out the picture of what happens to dogs after gonadectomy. Metabolic and weight changes A 2019 University of Copenhagen study published in Preventive Veterinary Medicine, led by Dr. Charlotte Bjornvad, found that castrated male dogs had roughly three times the risk of being heavy or obese compared to intact males. The researchers attributed this in part to changes in appetite regulation and metabolic activity post-surgery. Joint disorders Research from Dr. Benjamin Hart and colleagues at UC Davis has examined how spay and neuter timing affects joint disorder rates in specific breeds. Their work has documented elevated rates of joint issues like cranial cruciate ligament rupture in dogs altered before skeletal maturity, particularly in larger breeds. Thyroid function Veterinary literature has noted that gonadectomized dogs have a higher rate of hypothyroidism than intact dogs. The mechanism is still being studied, but the proximity of LH receptors to thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) receptors in the thyroid gland is one proposed explanation, since continuous LH receptor activation may interfere with TSH signaling. Cancer risk patterns The picture here is genuinely mixed. Spaying and neutering reduce the risk of some cancers (mammary, ovarian, testicular) and elevate the risk of others (certain hemangiosarcomas, osteosarcomas, lymphomas, and mast cell tumors in some breeds). Hart and colleagues, along with other research groups, have published breed-specific data showing how these risk profiles vary. Cognitive function Research, including work from the Kutzler lab, has examined possible connections between sustained elevated LH and canine cognitive dysfunction syndrome in older altered dogs. The research is ongoing and not fully settled, but it has opened a meaningful avenue of investigation. Urinary continence Spayed females have an elevated rate of urinary incontinence compared to intact females, particularly as they age. This has been studied for decades and is one of the more well-established post-spay effects. The thread tying all of this together is not that gonadectomy is bad. It is that gonadectomy has biological consequences beyond reproduction, and those consequences deserve to be understood by the people making decisions about their dog's care. How This Science Translates to the Real World Most owners are not going to read primary veterinary literature, and they should not have to. What matters is how this body of research translates into practical understanding. A few takeaways that flow naturally from the science: The hormonal changes after spay or neuter are permanent. They are not something the body adapts back from. The dog lives in a different endocrine environment for the rest of her life. The downstream effects are gradual, not immediate. Most owners will not see anything dramatic in the weeks after surgery. The metabolic, joint, urinary, and other shifts develop over months and years. Not every dog experiences every effect. Genetics, breed, age at surgery, body condition, and lifestyle all influence how a particular dog responds to the hormonal shift. Some dogs sail through. Others develop multiple issues over time. Supporting the dog through this changed landscape is a reasonable thing to do. Wellness-focused supplements like Hans, made by Hans Pet Brands, are designed for this context. Hans is built around elk velvet antler, an ingredient with research backing in canine wellness, and is formulated for the post-surgical and aging populations whose hormonal profiles have shifted. You can read more at hansfordogs.com. As with anything new, this is a vet conversation. The science also points toward personalization. The 2024 World Small Animal Veterinary Association reproduction control guidelines formally acknowledged that timing and approach should be tailored to the individual dog rather than applied as a blanket rule. The research is moving in the same direction. What Science Does Not Yet Fully Explain It is worth being honest about the open questions, because there are several. Researchers do not yet have a complete picture of why some altered dogs experience significant downstream effects while others experience almost none. Genetic variation is part of the answer, but the full mechanisms are still being mapped. The exact role of sustained elevated LH is still under active investigation. The receptor distribution work from Dr. Kutzler and others is well-established, but the precise contributions of LH to each downstream condition continue to be studied. The optimal timing and method of sterilization remains a personalization question rather than a settled rule. Different research groups have reached different conclusions for different breeds and life stages. The role of nutritional and supplement-based wellness support in mitigating downstream effects is an emerging area with growing interest but limited large-scale clinical trial data so far. Most of the evidence in this space comes from ingredient-level research and clinical observations, with formal product-level studies still relatively new. Frequently Asked Questions Does the body produce any sex hormones after spay or neuter? Yes, in small amounts. The adrenal glands and certain other tissues produce small quantities of sex hormones, which is why altered dogs are not at zero. But the gonadal source, which was the primary producer, is gone permanently, and the remaining production is a fraction of normal levels. Do all altered dogs have elevated luteinizing hormone? Yes. The published research on this is consistent. Without the negative feedback signal from gonadal sex hormones, the pituitary continues releasing LH, and altered dogs settle into significantly higher baseline LH levels than intact dogs. The variability is in how that elevated LH affects each individual dog's tissues, not in whether the elevation occurs. Are these hormonal changes a reason to avoid spaying or neutering? Not necessarily. Spaying and neutering remain useful procedures with real benefits, including population control and reduced rates of certain reproductive diseases. The point of understanding the hormonal science is not to argue against the surgery, but to support the dog through the changed landscape that follows it. Most veterinarians today recommend a personalized approach to timing and method rather than avoidance. How quickly does the hormonal landscape change after surgery? The drop in gonadal sex hormone production is essentially immediate, since the glands producing them are removed during the procedure. The rise in LH and the cascade of downstream effects develop over weeks and months as the body's regulatory systems adjust to the new normal. Where can owners learn more about this research? The work of Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University and Dr. Benjamin Hart at UC Davis is widely cited in this space and is a good starting point. The 2024 WSAVA reproduction control guidelines are also publicly available. Many of the studies are accessible through PubMed for owners who want to read the original research. What Owners Walk Away Knowing The science of hormone loss in spayed and neutered dogs is not as mysterious as it has historically been treated. The mechanisms are documented. The downstream effects are studied. The institutional thinking is shifting toward more personalized recommendations and a longer-term wellness conversation. What that means for any individual dog still depends on her specific situation, her breed, her age, and what you are seeing as her owner. But the science gives owners and vets a real framework for understanding what changed and why it matters, which is a meaningful upgrade over the older approach of treating the surgery as a one-time event with no further hormonal context. If your dog has been spayed or neutered, knowing this science puts you in a better position to support her wellness over the years that follow. That is the whole point of explaining it.  

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Do Dogs Need Hormone Supplements After Being Spayed or Neutered?

by Carly Mansfield on May 08 2026
The Straight Answer Up Front Some spayed and neutered dogs benefit from hormone-focused wellness support, and some do not. The honest answer to whether your dog needs one depends on her age, her breed, what changes you are seeing since surgery, and how you and your vet think about long-term wellness. This post walks through the decision rather than handing you a yes or no. Why This Question Does Not Have a Simple Answer Search the question online and you will find two camps. One camp says hormone supplements are essential for every altered dog. The other camp says they are unnecessary marketing. Neither camp is right, and neither is being honest about the actual evidence. The truth sits in between, and it depends on the specific dog. The body of veterinary research on post-spay and post-neuter health has grown meaningfully over the past decade. What it shows is that some dogs experience downstream effects from gonadectomy and some do not. Some experience them mildly. Some experience them severely. Genetics, breed, age at surgery, body condition, and lifestyle all influence how a dog responds to the hormonal change. What that means in practice: the question "do dogs need hormone supplements after being spayed or neutered" is the wrong question. The better question is "does my dog, at her current age and stage and with her current set of signals, benefit from hormone-focused wellness support?" That question has a real answer, and the rest of this post is about how to find it. What Actually Changes After Surgery To know whether your dog needs support, it helps to understand what the surgery actually does to her hormonal landscape. Spaying removes the ovaries, which are the primary source of estrogen and progesterone in an intact female dog. Neutering removes the testes, which are the primary source of testosterone in an intact male. In both cases, the body's negative-feedback loop with the pituitary gland is interrupted, which leads to elevated luteinizing hormone levels in altered dogs. Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University has published research showing that LH receptors are present in many non-reproductive tissues, including the thyroid, joints, and bladder. The body adapts to these changes, but it does not replace the hormones it has lost. That altered hormonal environment is permanent, and it is the environment your dog is going to live in for the rest of her life. Whether that environment causes meaningful issues for any individual dog depends on a lot of factors. Some dogs sail through it with no visible effects. Others develop weight gain, joint stiffness, urinary changes, or behavioral shifts over time. The variability is real, and it is part of why blanket recommendations do not work well in this category. When the Answer Is Probably Yes A few situations where hormone-focused wellness support is genuinely worth considering for an altered dog. When measurable changes have started showing up If you have noticed weight gain that diet and exercise alone have not solved, joint stiffness disproportionate to your dog's age, coat changes, urinary changes, or behavioral shifts since surgery, those are signals worth taking seriously. Each of those individually has been studied in connection with the hormonal changes that follow gonadectomy. Pairing your observations with a vet conversation often points toward wellness support as part of a broader approach. When the dog is in a higher-risk category Large and giant breeds, dogs altered very young, and certain breeds with documented sensitivity to early gonadectomy (golden retrievers, German shepherds, and Rottweilers, among others, based on UC Davis research from Dr. Benjamin Hart and colleagues) tend to benefit more from proactive support than smaller, lower-risk breeds. When the dog is moving into middle or senior age Hormonal changes from surgery and natural age-related decline compound on each other. Owners of altered dogs in the seven-and-up range often find that supporting hormonal wellness becomes more relevant as the years stack up. When you are taking a long-term wellness view Some owners think of wellness in terms of solving current problems. Others think of it in terms of supporting the body before problems show up. If you are in the second camp, hormone-focused support fits naturally into that mindset, similar to how some owners give a daily joint supplement before joint issues appear. When the Answer Is Probably Not Yet A few situations where hormone-focused support is probably not a high priority right now. When your dog is young, recently altered, and showing no symptoms A two-year-old healthy dog with a normal weight, good energy, a glossy coat, and no behavioral changes does not have an urgent reason for this category. You can keep an eye on things and revisit the question if anything shifts. When the dog is intact and healthy Hormone-focused support exists primarily for altered or aging dogs. A young, intact dog has her own hormonal system running normally and does not need outside wellness support specifically for hormonal reasons. When you have not yet had a vet conversation about the changes you are noticing If you are seeing symptoms, the right first step is the vet, not the supplement aisle. Some of the things owners attribute to hormonal changes turn out to be thyroid issues, dietary problems, or other conditions that need actual medical attention. Hormone-focused support is a complement to good vet care, not a replacement for it. When budget is tight and you have to prioritize If you have to choose between high-quality food and a wellness supplement, food wins almost every time. Daily nutrition is the foundation. Supplements live on top of that foundation, not in place of it. What Hans Brings to This Decision Hans, made by Hans Pet Brands, is a daily chew built specifically for the hormonal wellness needs of altered and aging dogs. The formula is centered on elk velvet antler, which has research backing in the canine wellness space, including a 2004 Canadian Veterinary Journal study by Moreau and colleagues at the University of Montreal that evaluated elk velvet antler in dogs with osteoarthritis. You can read more at hansfordogs.com. If your situation matches the "probably yes" categories above and you have had a green-light conversation with your vet, Hans is one option in this category. It is not the only one, and the right product is the one that fits your dog's specific situation. The point of this post is not to push a single answer, but to help you arrive at a thoughtful one. The Decision Framework Most Owners End Up Using When the dust settles, most owners who think clearly about this decision end up running through a short mental checklist. It looks something like this. Has my dog been spayed or neutered, or is she moving into the senior years? If no, this category is probably not for her. If yes, keep going. Am I noticing any signs that suggest hormonal changes are showing up downstream (weight gain, mobility changes, coat changes, urinary changes, behavioral shifts)? If no, the question is whether you want to take a proactive long-term-wellness approach. If yes, support is more clearly relevant. Have I talked to my vet, or am I planning to? If no, that is the right next step before adding anything new. If yes, and you have a green light, you can start exploring options. Do I understand that this is a long-game category and not a quick fix? If yes, great. If you are looking for a two-week transformation, this is not the category for you, and that is honest information to have up front. If you can answer these questions clearly, you usually know whether your dog needs this kind of support without anyone else telling you. The Pitfalls That Lead Owners Astray A few traps to avoid as you think this through. The first is letting marketing make the decision for you. Some brands present hormone supplements as essential for every altered dog. That overstates the case and creates pressure that does not match the evidence. The second is the opposite trap, which is dismissing the category entirely because it is new or because some products in it have weak claims. Velvet antler in particular has a real research base. Not every product is doing the same thing, and good products in this category are doing legitimate wellness work. The third is treating supplements as a substitute for the basics. Diet, exercise, weight management, dental care, and regular vet checkups do more for a dog's long-term health than any supplement ever will. Wellness products work best on top of those fundamentals, not in place of them. The fourth is starting and stopping. If you decide this category is right for your dog, daily consistency matters far more than dose-loading. A chew given every day for three months is going to be more useful than the same chew given inconsistently for two weeks at a higher dose. Frequently Asked Questions Will my dog be unhealthy if I do not give her a hormone supplement? No. Plenty of altered and aging dogs live long, healthy lives without one. The question is not whether she will survive without it, but whether targeted wellness support might help her thrive a bit better given the hormonal changes she has been through. That is a different question, and the answer depends on her specific situation. How do I know if my dog is having post-surgical hormonal changes versus just aging? You often cannot fully separate the two, because they overlap. Both can show up as weight changes, slower recovery, coat changes, and energy shifts. The good news is that the underlying support approach is similar for both. The better news is that this is exactly what your vet is trained to help you sort through. Are hormone supplements just glucosamine in disguise? Some are. The category is small, and not every product is doing the same thing. A real hormone-focused supplement is built around ingredients with documented relevance to endocrine wellness, like velvet antler, and is designed for the broader endocrine context rather than just joint mechanics. A "hormone supplement" that is mostly glucosamine with a senior-friendly label is essentially a joint product. Reading the ingredients list with attention is the way to tell the difference. Can I try a hormone supplement for a month and see what happens? You can, but a month is on the short end of what most owners describe seeing in this category. If you are going to test a product, give it a fair window of consistent daily use, take notes or photos to track changes, and check in with your vet along the way. Two-week trials rarely give you enough information to make a real decision. Is this just marketing for a problem that does not exist? The hormonal changes after spay and neuter are real and have been documented in published veterinary research. That part is not marketing. Whether any specific supplement is the right answer for your specific dog is a separate question, and the answer varies. Skepticism toward marketing claims is healthy. Skepticism toward the underlying science is not really supported by the current research. How to Land Your Own Answer If you have read this far, you probably already have a sense of where your dog falls. The question of whether she needs hormone support after being spayed or neutered is not a yes or no for the whole population of altered dogs. It is a yes or no for her, given her age, her stage, her breed, and what you are seeing in real life. Talk to your vet. Pay attention to what your dog is telling you. If the case for support is there, products like Hans are in the category for a reason and worth considering. If the case is not there yet, you can revisit the question in a year or whenever something changes. Either answer is a thoughtful one, and either answer puts you ahead of the average owner who never thinks about it at all. That is the real point of this conversation. Not to push every dog into the same category, but to make sure the question gets asked at all.  

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Post-Spay Supplements: What to Give Your Dog After Surgery

by Carly Mansfield on May 08 2026
The Two-Sentence Version Most post-spay supplement decisions fall into two buckets: short-term recovery support in the first few weeks after surgery, and longer-term wellness support in the months and years that follow. This guide walks through both, with the caveat that any supplement decision around the surgical period should be cleared with your veterinarian first. Why This Question Comes Up So Often Walk into any pet store or scroll any pet wellness website right after your dog gets spayed or neutered, and the options multiply quickly. There are recovery supplements, calming chews, joint formulas, hormonal wellness products, immunity boosters, and skin and coat support. Some are useful. Some are redundant. And some are products looking for a problem. Most owners come to this question with two real concerns. The first is helping their dog recover comfortably from the procedure itself. The second is supporting their dog's long-term health given that the surgery has changed her hormonal landscape permanently. Both concerns are valid, and they deserve different answers, because the supplement category that matters during the first three weeks after surgery is not the same as the one that matters over the next three years. The First Rule: Talk to Your Vet About Anything Given in the Recovery Window This part is non-negotiable. The first two to three weeks after surgery are a sensitive period. Your dog is healing internal tissue, processing anesthesia, possibly on prescribed pain medication or antibiotics, and healing an incision. This is not the time to introduce a new supplement without checking with the vet who performed or oversaw the surgery. Some supplements can interact with prescription medications. Some can affect clotting or healing. Some are simply unnecessary in this window and add complication without benefit. A quick text or call to your vet's office covers it. Most vets are happy to give a yes or no on common supplements within a few minutes, and that small step protects your dog during the most sensitive part of the timeline. The Recovery Window: Weeks One Through Three The first three weeks are about three things. Healing the incision. Managing comfort. Letting the body recalibrate. Your vet will typically have already addressed the medical side: pain management, antibiotics if appropriate, and clear instructions about activity restriction. Most of the supplement-aisle products marketed for this window are not strictly necessary for a healthy dog with a routine surgery. The body is well-equipped to heal on its own when given rest, nutrition, and limited activity. A few categories owners commonly ask about during this window: Probiotics Sometimes recommended if the dog is on antibiotics that can disrupt gut bacteria. Worth asking your vet about specifically, because timing matters (probiotics taken at the same time as antibiotics can cancel each other out). Calming aids Some dogs are restless or anxious during the activity-restriction period, especially active breeds who suddenly cannot run. Calming chews with ingredients like L-theanine or chamomile are commonly used, but again, this is a vet conversation if your dog is on any other medications. Omega-3 fatty acids A general anti-inflammatory profile that some vets recommend during recovery, but not universally. Worth asking about rather than assuming. What is generally not recommended during this window is starting a brand-new daily wellness supplement that you plan to give long-term. The recovery period is a poor time to introduce a new variable, because if your dog has any reaction or unusual symptom, it becomes harder to figure out whether the cause is the surgery, the medication, or the new supplement. Once Recovery Is Complete: Shifting to Long-Term Wellness Once your dog has fully healed, usually around the four-week mark and after the vet has signed off on a return to normal activity, the conversation shifts. This is where the supplement question becomes less about recovery and more about supporting your dog's wellness given the hormonal shift she has just been through. This is also where most of the genuinely useful supplement categories come in. Hormonal wellness support After spay or neuter, the body's main source of estrogen, progesterone, or testosterone is gone. Veterinary research has documented downstream changes in metabolism, joint health, and behavior that can develop gradually in the months and years afterward. A 2019 University of Copenhagen study published in Preventive Veterinary Medicine, for example, found that castrated male dogs had roughly three times the obesity risk of intact males. Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University has published extensively on the role of luteinizing hormone receptors in non-reproductive tissues like the thyroid, joints, and bladder. This is the category Hans, made by Hans Pet Brands, was specifically designed for. It is a daily chew built around elk velvet antler and formulated for the hormonal wellness needs of altered and aging dogs. You can read more at hansfordogs.com. As with any new supplement, this is a vet conversation, especially during the first introduction. Joint support Particularly relevant for large and giant breeds, since some research has connected early spay or neuter to joint disorder rates in certain breeds. Glucosamine and chondroitin formulas are common, and some hormonal wellness supplements (including those that contain velvet antler) deliver some of these compounds naturally. Omega-3s for ongoing skin, coat, and joint support Often added as a long-term staple rather than a recovery-only product. Probiotics for gut health If your dog had a course of antibiotics during recovery, a follow-up probiotic regimen for a few weeks afterward can help re-establish gut balance. Multivitamins Usually unnecessary for a dog on a high-quality, complete-and-balanced commercial diet. Sometimes useful for dogs on home-cooked or limited diets, but this is a vet-and-nutritionist conversation. What to Skip A few categories that get marketed heavily but rarely earn their place in a post-surgery wellness routine: Anything claiming to "detox" your dog after anesthesia. Healthy dogs clear anesthesia on their own. There is no detox protocol that has been shown to be useful or necessary. Anything promising to "reverse" the effects of spay or neuter. The hormonal changes from gonadectomy are permanent. Quality supplements support wellness around those changes; they do not undo them, and any product claiming otherwise is making a claim that no responsible brand should make. Anything bundled as a "post-surgery essentials kit" with five or six unrelated products. These are usually marketing bundles rather than vet-informed protocols. Anything that promises a dramatic change in two weeks. Wellness categories work gradually. Two-week miracle claims are a sign to walk away. How to Think About Timing A simple framework that has worked for many owners. In the first three weeks after surgery, follow your vet's protocol exactly. Do not introduce new supplements unless your vet specifically recommends one. The body is healing. In the four-to-eight-week range, once your vet has confirmed full recovery, this is a reasonable window to begin thinking about long-term wellness support. Pick one category at a time so you can see how your dog responds. From two months onward, this becomes a regular wellness conversation rather than a recovery conversation. Daily consistency matters more than which week you started. Common Mistakes Owners Make in This Window Three patterns come up over and over. The first is starting too many things at once. Owners who introduce a new diet, two new supplements, and a new exercise plan all in the same week have no way to know what is doing what. Stagger introductions by at least two weeks each. The second is treating short-term recovery products as long-term solutions. Calming chews intended to get a dog through the activity-restriction phase are not designed for daily use forever. Recovery-window products and long-term wellness products usually serve different purposes. The third is skipping the vet conversation. Even owners who would never skip a yearly checkup sometimes start adding supplements without asking. The conversation takes five minutes and prevents a surprising number of avoidable issues. Frequently Asked Questions How soon after spay or neuter surgery can I start a wellness supplement? Most vets recommend waiting until full recovery is confirmed, typically around the four-week mark, before introducing any new daily supplement that is not specifically recommended for the recovery window. The exact timing is a conversation to have with your vet based on your dog's individual recovery. Are there supplements I should avoid right after surgery? Anything not specifically cleared by your vet, including some herbal products, calming aids, and joint formulas, may interact with prescribed medications or affect healing. The first two to three weeks are not the right window to experiment. When in doubt, ask. Is hormonal wellness support necessary for every spayed or neutered dog? Not necessary in a strict sense, but increasingly part of the conversation for owners thinking long-term. Younger and healthier dogs with no symptoms can usually wait. Dogs showing early signs of hormonal shifts, or those moving into middle age, are typically the ones whose owners find this category most relevant. Can I give my dog a hormonal wellness supplement and a joint supplement together? In most cases yes, but check the ingredient lists for overlap (some hormonal wellness products already contain joint-supporting compounds). And run the combination by your vet, especially if your dog is on any medication. What should I be watching for in the months after surgery? Subtle changes in weight, energy level, coat condition, urinary habits, and behavior are all worth noting. None of these on their own are alarming, but if you see a pattern emerging, that is the kind of thing worth bringing up at your dog's next checkup. Hormonal changes after surgery tend to show up gradually rather than all at once. The Honest Takeaway Post-spay and post-neuter supplement decisions do not have to be complicated. The first few weeks are about healing, and the right answer in that window is usually "follow your vet's protocol and do not add anything new without checking." Once recovery is complete, the conversation shifts to long-term wellness, and that is where categories like hormonal support, joint support, and others become genuinely useful for the right dogs. The brands and products that earn their place in this routine are the ones that match the actual phase your dog is in. Not the ones with the loudest marketing. Not the ones promising the fastest results. Just the ones built thoughtfully, backed by reasonable research, and aligned with what your vet is comfortable with for your specific dog. Take it slow. Ask the questions. Pick the products that fit the moment. That is the whole approach, and over the years that follow your dog's surgery, it tends to be the one that pays off.  

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Beyond the Surgery: A New Approach to Post-Spay and Neuter Hormonal Wellness

by Carly Mansfield on May 08 2026
The Big Idea in One Paragraph The conversation about spay and neuter is shifting. For decades, the procedure was treated as a one-time event with no further follow-up needed. New veterinary research has changed that, showing that hormonal changes after surgery can quietly shape a dog's health for years afterward. A new approach has started to take shape, one that treats the surgery as the beginning of a longer wellness conversation rather than the end of it. Where the Old Mindset Came From For most of the last fifty years, spay and neuter recommendations in the United States followed a simple script. Get the dog altered young. Recover for a few weeks. Move on with life. The procedure was framed almost exclusively as a population-control measure and a way to reduce certain reproductive cancers, and that framing was not wrong. It was just incomplete. What got left out of the conversation was what happens hormonally in the years that follow. The ovaries and testes are not just reproductive organs. They are endocrine glands, meaning they produce hormones that travel through the bloodstream and influence tissues all over the body. When those glands are removed, the dog's body loses its main source of estrogen, progesterone, or testosterone. The body adapts, but it does not replace what is gone. And because the changes are gradual, owners and even some veterinarians have historically attributed the downstream effects to aging, breed, or individual personality rather than to the surgery itself. That assumption is now being challenged. What Changed in the Research Several lines of veterinary research over the past decade have reshaped how the field thinks about post-surgical hormonal health. The Kutzler Lab and the LH conversation Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University has published extensively on the role of luteinizing hormone in altered dogs. Her published research has identified LH receptors in non-reproductive tissues including the thyroid, joints, bladder, and immune cells, opening up a new framework for understanding why altered dogs sometimes experience long-term changes in those systems. The Hart studies on breed-specific outcomes Dr. Benjamin Hart and colleagues at UC Davis have published a series of studies examining how spay and neuter timing affects health outcomes in specific breeds. Their work has identified meaningful differences in joint disorder and certain cancer rates depending on when the surgery is performed, which has led to more nuanced conversations between vets and owners about timing. The Copenhagen obesity research A 2019 University of Copenhagen study published in Preventive Veterinary Medicine found that castrated male dogs had roughly three times the risk of being heavy or obese compared to intact males, with researchers connecting this to changes in appetite regulation and metabolic activity post-surgery. The 2024 WSAVA reproduction guidelines The World Small Animal Veterinary Association updated its reproduction control guidelines in 2024, formally acknowledging that spay and neuter decisions involve trade-offs and should be tailored to the individual dog rather than applied as a blanket recommendation. This was a meaningful institutional shift. The picture that emerges from this body of work is consistent. Surgical sterilization is still a useful and often necessary procedure, but its long-term implications deserve more attention than they have historically received. What "A New Approach" Actually Means in Practice Calling something a "new approach" is easy. Spelling out what it actually looks like in real life is the harder part. Here are the practical shifts owners and vets are starting to make. Treating the surgery as the start of a wellness plan, not the end Old approach: post-op visit, then no further hormonal conversation. New approach: a plan for the months and years after surgery, including periodic check-ins about weight, mobility, behavior, and any signs that suggest hormonal changes are showing up downstream. Watching for connections owners used to miss Old approach: weight gain, joint stiffness, urinary leaking, and behavioral changes were treated as separate, unrelated issues. New approach: those signs are looked at together as potential signals of post-surgical hormonal shifts, and the underlying cause is part of the conversation. Including nutritional wellness support in the picture Old approach: post-surgery nutritional support was rarely mentioned beyond standard food recommendations. New approach: hormone-focused nutritional supplements, joint support, and other targeted wellness products are now part of the conversation for owners of altered dogs, especially as those dogs move into middle and senior years. Personalizing the timing of the surgery itself Old approach: standardized recommendation to spay or neuter at six months, regardless of breed or individual factors. New approach: timing is tailored to breed, size, and individual health profile, often in partnership with a veterinarian who is up to date on current research. Where Hans Fits Into This Shift Hans, made by Hans Pet Brands, is a daily chew built specifically with this newer framing in mind. The formula is centered on elk velvet antler, an ingredient with research backing in the canine wellness space, and is designed for the post-surgical and aging populations whose hormonal profiles have shifted. Where many supplements target a single concern like joint stiffness, Hans was designed around the broader endocrine context that often sits beneath those concerns. You can read more at hansfordogs.com. The product is included here as one example of what hormonal wellness support can look like in practice. Whether it is the right fit for your dog is a conversation worth having with your veterinarian, especially if your dog has any pre-existing endocrine considerations. Who Benefits Most From This Shift in Thinking Three groups of dogs benefit the most when their owners embrace this newer framing. Recently altered young adults The window right after surgery is when the hormonal environment changes most dramatically. Owners who start paying attention to wellness during this period, rather than waiting for symptoms to appear years later, are setting their dog up for a smoother long-term trajectory. Middle-aged altered dogs already showing subtle changes Dogs in the four-to-eight-year range who have started gaining weight, slowing down, or showing minor behavioral shifts are often the ones whose owners say "I just thought she was getting older." Many of these dogs are responding to a hormonal landscape that has been gradually shifting since surgery, and earlier attention helps. Senior altered dogs Senior dogs are often the ones already showing more advanced versions of the same patterns. Hormonal wellness support is not a reset button for them, but it can be part of a thoughtful approach to keeping them as comfortable and active as possible in their later years. What This Approach Is Not It is worth being clear about what this newer framing is not, so it does not get oversold. It is not anti-spay or anti-neuter. The procedure remains a useful tool, and for many dogs it is the right choice. The newer thinking is about supporting the dog after surgery, not avoiding the surgery in the first place. It is not a promise of dramatic transformation. Hormonal wellness is a slow, gradual category. Owners who are looking for a supplement that produces a visible change in two weeks are usually disappointed by anything in this space. It is not a substitute for veterinary care. If your dog has a diagnosed endocrine condition like Cushing's or Addison's disease, those need actual veterinary treatment. Wellness support is a complement to good veterinary care, not a replacement for it. It is not the same conversation for every dog. Breed, size, age at surgery, current age, and individual health all matter, which is why the new approach leans on personalization rather than a one-size-fits-all rule. How to Start Having the Conversation With Your Vet If you want to bring this newer framing into your dog's care, here are a few things that have worked for owners who have done it. Bring specifics. Note any patterns you have seen since surgery, including weight changes, energy shifts, behavioral changes, or coat differences. The more specific the picture, the better the conversation. Ask about timing-related research if your dog is not yet altered. Vets are increasingly comfortable discussing breed-specific timing recommendations. Mention any supplements you are considering. Hormonal wellness products, joint support, and similar additions are best discussed with your vet so they can flag any concerns based on your dog's specific health profile. Ask whether your dog might benefit from periodic endocrine bloodwork as he ages. This is becoming a more common conversation as awareness grows. Frequently Asked Questions Does this mean I should not spay or neuter my dog? No. The newer thinking is not anti-spay or anti-neuter. It is about understanding what happens hormonally after the surgery and supporting the dog accordingly. For many dogs, the procedure is still the right choice. The conversation has shifted from "should we do it" to "how do we support the dog afterward." My dog was spayed years ago and seems totally fine. Is there anything to do? If your dog is genuinely thriving, the most important thing is to keep an eye out as she ages. Hormonal changes can show up gradually, and signs that look like normal aging sometimes have an endocrine component worth flagging. There is no urgent action needed for a healthy adult dog beyond staying observant and keeping regular vet checkups. Is hormonal wellness support necessary, or is it optional? Optional, depending on the dog. A young, healthy, recently-altered dog with no signs of any post-surgical changes does not strictly need additional support. As the dog ages or starts showing subtle signs, the conversation becomes more relevant. Many owners view it the same way they view a quality joint supplement, as part of a thoughtful long-term wellness routine. Can a hormone-focused supplement help with behavioral changes after surgery? Some altered dogs experience behavioral shifts that have been studied in connection with hormonal changes. Whether a supplement helps depends on the dog and the specific behavior. Behavior is complex, and significant behavioral concerns usually need attention from your vet and possibly a trainer or behaviorist alongside any wellness support. Where can I learn more about the research mentioned in this article? The work of Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University and Dr. Benjamin Hart at UC Davis is widely cited in this space and is a good starting point for owners who want to dig deeper. The 2024 WSAVA reproduction control guidelines are also publicly available and reflect the current institutional thinking. A Quieter, Smarter Way to Care for an Altered Dog The shift in how the field thinks about post-spay and neuter health is not a revolution. It is more like a quiet correction to a conversation that was incomplete for a long time. Spaying and neutering are still useful procedures. They are also more than just one-time events, and the dogs whose owners understand that tend to do better in the long run. You do not need to overthink this. You do not need to feel guilty about having spayed or neutered your dog. What you do need is awareness, a good relationship with your vet, and a willingness to support your dog's wellness in the years that follow the surgery, not just the weeks. That is the whole shift, and that is what makes the newer approach worth paying attention to.  

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The Complete Guide to Hormone Supplements for Dogs

by Carly Mansfield on May 08 2026
Skim This First Hormone supplements for dogs are nutritional products that support endocrine wellness in dogs whose hormone levels have changed due to spay surgery, neuter surgery, or aging. They are not pharmaceuticals, they do not replace hormones the way human HRT does, and the best ones are built around well-researched ingredients like velvet antler. This guide walks through how the category works, who it actually helps, and what separates a thoughtful product from a marketing label. Why This Guide Needed to Exist Search "dog hormone supplement" online and you will find a strange mix of results. Some pages are written by veterinarians. Some are written by marketers. Some are written by people who clearly have never spoken to either. The information is scattered, the terminology is inconsistent, and most owners walk away more confused than when they started. This guide is built to fix that. It pulls together what the published veterinary research actually says, what these supplements actually contain, and what the real-world considerations look like when you are standing in front of a shelf trying to decide whether your dog needs one. No hype, no exaggeration, and no claims that a daily chew is going to transform your dog overnight. How Dog Endocrine Systems Actually Work Before talking about supplements, it helps to understand the system they are designed to support. A dog's endocrine system is a network of glands that produce and release hormones into the bloodstream. The major players include the pituitary gland, thyroid, adrenal glands, pancreas, and the gonads (ovaries or testes). Each gland produces specific hormones that travel through the body and bind to receptors in target tissues, telling those tissues what to do. Hormones influence everything from appetite to mood to muscle maintenance to coat condition. In an intact, healthy adult dog, the endocrine system runs on a feedback loop. Hormones are released, they do their job, and the body senses the levels and adjusts accordingly. It is a self-regulating system that has worked the same way for millions of years. Two things disrupt this loop in modern pet dogs. The first is gonadectomy, where surgical sterilization removes the ovaries or testes and eliminates the body's main source of estrogen, progesterone, or testosterone. The second is aging, which gradually reduces the output of multiple endocrine glands over time. Both of these create a hormonal landscape that the dog's body was not originally designed to operate in long-term. Hormone supplements are formulated with this disrupted landscape in mind. What Is Actually Inside a Hormone Supplement for Dogs This category is small enough that there is not a huge variety of formulations on the market, but the quality range is wide. A few of the most common ingredients you will see on labels. Velvet antler The most studied ingredient in this space. Velvet antler is the soft, growing tissue inside elk or deer antlers, harvested before the antler hardens into bone. It contains collagen, chondroitin sulfate, glucosamine, amino acids, peptides, and trace minerals. A 2004 study in the Canadian Veterinary Journal by Moreau and colleagues at the University of Montreal evaluated elk velvet antler in dogs with osteoarthritis and reported improvements in gait and daily activity, with no adverse effects in blood analysis. Adaptogenic herbs Some formulas include herbs like ashwagandha or rhodiola, which have been studied primarily in humans for their effects on stress hormone regulation. The dog-specific research on these is much thinner, so they are typically supporting characters in a formula rather than the lead ingredient. Omega-3 fatty acids Often included for their general anti-inflammatory profile and skin and coat benefits. Not specifically a hormone ingredient, but commonly added to round out a wellness formula. Targeted vitamins and minerals Things like zinc, selenium, and B-vitamins show up in some formulas because they are involved in various endocrine pathways. These are inexpensive to include and generally well-tolerated. What you will not find in a quality hormone supplement is actual synthetic hormones. Estrogen, testosterone, and similar compounds are prescription-only and would never be sold over the counter as a chew or powder. Who Actually Benefits From This Category Not every dog needs a hormone supplement, and being honest about that is important. The dogs most likely to benefit from one fall into three groups. The first group is spayed females. After ovariectomy, estrogen and progesterone production from the ovaries stops. Some of the most commonly cited downstream effects include weight gain, urinary leakage, and changes in coat texture. Research from multiple institutions has connected these changes to the hormonal shift, which is why endocrine-focused nutritional support shows up in conversations about spayed female wellness. The second group is neutered males. After castration, testosterone production from the testes ends, and luteinizing hormone levels rise as the feedback loop is interrupted. Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University has published extensively on the presence of LH receptors in non-reproductive tissues like the thyroid, joints, and bladder, and has connected sustained elevated LH to a range of long-term concerns. A 2019 University of Copenhagen study published in Preventive Veterinary Medicine also found that castrated male dogs had roughly three times the obesity risk of intact males. The third group is senior dogs, including intact ones. Hormonal output naturally tapers with age, and dogs over the age of seven (or earlier in giant breeds) can show signs of slower recovery, reduced muscle tone, and changes in cognition. If your dog falls into none of these three groups, a hormone supplement is probably not a high priority for him right now. What Hans Brings to the Conversation Hans, made by Hans Pet Brands, is a daily chew designed specifically for hormonal wellness in dogs. The formula is built around elk velvet antler and is positioned around the post-surgical and aging populations described above. Where most pet supplements target a single concern like joint stiffness or coat quality, Hans was designed around the broader endocrine context that often sits underneath those concerns. You can read more about how it works at hansfordogs.com. It is included in this guide as a relevant example of what a hormone-focused formula looks like in practice. Whether it is right for your dog is a conversation worth having with your vet, especially if your dog has a pre-existing endocrine condition. How to Read a Label Without Getting Tricked The supplement industry as a whole, including the pet supplement industry, is loosely regulated. That means label literacy matters more than brand recognition. A few things to check. The active ingredient should have a real dose listed If a product highlights velvet antler on the front of the bag but buries it in a "proprietary blend" on the back, you have no way to know how much is actually in each chew. Quality formulas list the active ingredient and the milligrams. The sourcing should be specific Especially for velvet antler, where quality varies widely. Look for clear language about country of origin, harvesting practices, and human-grade or food-grade designations. The ingredient list should be short Long lists of botanicals at trace doses are usually a sign of a product trying to look impressive rather than do something specific. A focused formula with a few well-dosed ingredients is generally a better signal. The marketing claims should be reasonable A supplement that promises to "reverse" anything or "cure" anything is making claims that no responsible product can back up. Wellness support is the appropriate framing. A real company should stand behind it Manufacturer transparency, customer service, third-party testing, and a clear country of manufacture all matter. If the brand is hard to find information about, that is its own answer. What to Expect When You Start A hormone supplement is not a quick fix. The body responds to nutritional inputs gradually, and most owners who notice changes describe them unfolding over weeks to months of consistent daily use rather than days. Some changes are subtle enough that owners only notice them in retrospect, comparing photos or remembering how their dog used to act on a walk. Consistency matters more than dose-loading. A daily chew given every day for three months is going to do more than a higher dose given inconsistently for two weeks. Build it into the morning routine the same way you would a toothbrushing or a walk. It also pays to keep an eye out and let your vet know what you are giving your dog. Supplements can interact with prescription medications, and a quick mention at the next checkup keeps everyone on the same page. Common Misconceptions Worth Clearing Up A few things people get wrong about this category. It is not hormone replacement therapy. There are no actual hormones in these supplements. They are nutritional products designed to support endocrine wellness, not replace hormones the dog is missing. It is not a substitute for veterinary care. If your dog has a diagnosed endocrine condition like Cushing's disease, Addison's disease, or hypothyroidism, those require veterinary management. Supplements are not a treatment. It is not just for old dogs. Spayed and neutered dogs experience a meaningful hormonal shift right after surgery, regardless of age. The conversation about hormonal wellness can begin much earlier than most owners realize. It is not a weight-loss product. Some owners hope a hormone supplement will fix unexplained weight gain on its own. The reality is that diet, exercise, and overall wellness all matter, and a supplement is one piece of a larger picture. Frequently Asked Questions Are hormone supplements regulated by the FDA? In the United States, pet supplements are regulated as animal foods rather than as drugs. They are not approved by the FDA the same way medications are, but reputable manufacturers follow guidelines from the National Animal Supplement Council and conduct their own testing. Looking for NASC certification or equivalent third-party verification is one way to gauge quality. Can I give a hormone supplement alongside my dog's other supplements? Usually yes, but it is worth running it past your vet. Many owners give a joint supplement, an omega-3, and a hormone-focused product in combination. The key is making sure the ingredients do not overlap heavily and that nothing interacts with prescription medications. Will a hormone supplement help with my dog's behavior? The honest answer is that it depends. Some behavioral changes seen in altered dogs have been studied in connection with hormonal shifts, and supporting overall wellness can be part of the picture. But behavior is complex, and other factors like training, environment, exercise, and diagnosed anxiety often need attention too. Talk to your vet if you are seeing significant behavioral concerns. How do I know if a hormone supplement is actually working? Track specific things rather than relying on a general impression. Take photos every few weeks. Note your dog's energy level on walks. Pay attention to recovery time after exercise. These kinds of small markers add up over time and give you something more useful than a vague sense of whether things have changed. What if my dog is intact and healthy? Does he still need this? Probably not right now. Intact dogs in good health and under the age of seven are not the primary audience for this category. The conversation gets more relevant as the dog ages or if a sterilization decision changes his hormonal profile down the road. The Last Thing Worth Saying Hormone supplements for dogs are part of a broader shift in how owners and vets think about long-term canine wellness. The conversation has moved past the surgery and into the years that follow it, and that is a good thing for dogs. The category is not a miracle, and no honest brand should pretend otherwise. But for the right dog, in the right life stage, paired with good vet care and a thoughtful daily routine, a quality hormone-focused supplement like Hans can be a useful addition to the picture. The goal is not to chase a quick result. It is to support the body your dog has now so the years ahead are as comfortable, active, and full as possible. That is the whole point of this category, and that is the whole point of this guide.  

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Dog Hormone Supplements: What They Are and When Your Dog Needs One

by Carly Mansfield on May 08 2026
The 60-Second Rundown A dog hormone supplement is a daily product designed to support endocrine function in dogs whose hormone levels have shifted due to spay surgery, neuter surgery, or natural aging. The category is relatively new because the long-term hormonal effects of these life events were not widely discussed until recent veterinary research brought them into focus. Knowing whether your dog could benefit from one comes down to a handful of specific signs many owners notice but rarely connect to hormones. Why Hormone Supplements for Dogs Are Suddenly a Thing For most of veterinary history, the conversation about dog hormones started and stopped at one moment: the spay or neuter surgery. The procedure was framed as a routine fix, and once the recovery cone came off, hormones were rarely discussed again. That has changed. Research from institutions like Oregon State University and the University of Copenhagen has documented something many owners were never told. Removing the ovaries or testes does not just prevent reproduction. It also removes the body's main source of estrogen, progesterone, or testosterone, and that change lasts for the rest of the dog's life. The same is true for aging dogs, whose remaining hormone output gradually declines year by year. Hormones are chemical messengers that play a role in muscle maintenance, joint health, metabolism, and brain function. When their levels shift, owners often notice changes without ever guessing the underlying cause. The dog seems heavier. The dog seems stiffer. The dog naps more, plays less, and seems to lose his spark a little earlier than expected. Hormone supplements are the first product category designed specifically with this gap in mind. What a Dog Hormone Supplement Actually Is This is where it helps to clear up a common misunderstanding. A dog hormone supplement is not the same thing as hormone replacement therapy in the human medical sense. Your dog is not getting an estrogen pill or a testosterone patch. Instead, these products are nutritional supplements that contain natural ingredients associated with endocrine and overall wellness support. The most studied ingredient in this space is velvet antler, the soft tissue harvested from elk or deer antlers during their growth phase, before they harden into bone. Velvet antler contains compounds including collagen, chondroitin sulfate, glucosamine, amino acids, and trace minerals. Hans, made by Hans Pet Brands, is a daily chew formulated for this purpose. Where many pet supplements target a single concern like joint stiffness or coat condition, Hans was designed around hormonal wellness as a category. You can read more about how it works at hansfordogs.com. A hormone supplement is not a cure or a medical treatment. It is a daily nutritional input intended to support the systems your dog relies on as he ages or after his hormonal balance changes. The Three Life Events That Shift a Dog's Hormone Levels There are three situations that meaningfully affect a dog's hormone profile. If your dog has gone through any of them, hormone-focused nutritional support is worth a real conversation with your vet. Life Event One: Spay Surgery When the ovaries are removed, estrogen and progesterone production from the gonads stops. Estrogen plays roles beyond reproduction, including in bone density, urinary tract health, and metabolic regulation. Some of the changes commonly seen in spayed females, such as weight gain or urinary leakage, have been linked in research to this hormonal shift. Life Event Two: Neuter Surgery Testosterone production from the testes ends after neutering. Without that source, the pituitary gland continues releasing luteinizing hormone, which results in elevated LH levels in altered dogs. Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University has published research showing that LH receptors are present in many non-reproductive tissues, including the thyroid, joints, and bladder, which is why her work has connected sustained elevated LH to a range of long-term health effects. Life Event Three: Aging Even intact dogs experience hormonal changes as they age. Growth hormone output drops. Thyroid function may dip. Around age seven for most breeds, and earlier for large and giant breeds, the slowdown becomes visible. Lean muscle quietly decreases. Recovery from exercise takes longer. The dog is still happy, but he is operating in a slightly different body than the one he had at three. If your dog falls into any of these three groups, his endocrine system is operating differently than it once did. That is the moment when nutritional support focused on hormonal wellness becomes a worthwhile conversation. Signs That Suggest Your Dog Could Benefit From One Most owners notice the symptoms long before they connect them to hormones. Here are the clearest signals. Unexplained weight gain He is eating the same food, getting the same walks, and still putting on pounds. A 2019 University of Copenhagen study published in Preventive Veterinary Medicine found that castrated male dogs had roughly three times the risk of being heavy or obese compared to intact males. Loss of muscle tone The shoulders look narrower. The hindquarters feel softer than they used to. Hormones play a role in lean tissue maintenance, and changes in their levels can be reflected in muscle mass over time. Stiffness that does not match his age Slower to get up after a nap. Reluctant to take the stairs. Joint cartilage and surrounding soft tissue rely on a range of physiological signals that change as a dog ages. Coat and skin changes Thinner fur, drier skin, or symmetrical hair loss along the flanks. These can have many causes, including endocrine ones, and are worth flagging to your vet. Mood and energy shifts Less playful. Sleeps through things he used to react to. Some altered dogs also show increased anxiety or noise sensitivity, which has been studied in connection with hormonal changes. Cognitive changes in older dogs Confusion in familiar settings. Pacing in the evening. Forgetting routines. Veterinary research, including work from Dr. Kutzler's lab, has examined possible connections between hormonal shifts and canine cognitive dysfunction. You do not need every symptom on this list. Even one or two, paired with a vet conversation, can be enough to make hormone-focused nutritional support worth considering. What to Look for in a Quality Dog Hormone Supplement The category is small but growing, and not every product on the shelf is doing the same thing. A few things to check before you buy. Active ingredient transparency The label should list exactly what is in it and at what amounts. If the hero ingredient is buried in a proprietary blend, it is harder to evaluate the dose. Real research behind the ingredients Velvet antler has decades of research behind it, including a 2004 Canadian Veterinary Journal study by Moreau and colleagues at the University of Montreal that tested elk velvet antler in dogs with osteoarthritis and reported improvements in gait and daily activity. Generic blends of vague botanicals typically do not have that depth of literature. Sourcing standards Velvet antler quality varies widely. Look for human-grade sourcing and clear country of origin. A format your dog will actually take A daily chew that your dog eats willingly is worth more than a powder that ends up half on the floor. Designed for the actual concern Many supplements marketed for senior dogs are essentially joint products with senior-friendly labeling. A hormone-focused supplement should be built around hormonal wellness specifically. Hans was designed to meet this kind of checklist, which is why it has become a starting point for many owners exploring this category. When to Start The most common mistake is waiting until the symptoms become severe. Hormonal change is gradual. By the time muscle loss or stiffness is obvious, the body has been adjusting for a while. For spayed and neutered dogs, conversations about hormonal wellness can begin once the post-surgical recovery period is complete. For aging intact dogs, the right window is around the time you first notice subtle changes, not after they become impossible to miss. As with any supplement, the right time to introduce it is best discussed with your veterinarian, especially if your dog has a known endocrine condition or is on medication. This is not about adding another bottle to the kitchen counter for the sake of it. It is about recognizing that the endocrine system shapes a lot of how your dog feels and that supporting his nutritional foundation alongside it can be part of a broader wellness approach. Frequently Asked Questions Are hormone supplements for dogs safe? Quality nutritional supplements built around well-studied ingredients like velvet antler have been used in dogs for many years. The 2004 Canadian Veterinary Journal study on elk velvet antler in dogs reported no adverse effects in blood analysis across the trial period. As with any supplement, safety depends on sourcing and formulation, which is why ingredient transparency matters. Always talk to your vet before starting a new supplement, especially if your dog is on prescription medication or has a known endocrine condition like Cushing's or Addison's disease. Can I give a hormone supplement to a dog that has not been spayed or neutered? Yes. Intact dogs experience age-related hormonal changes too, and hormone-focused supplements are not limited to altered dogs. The trigger that matters most is the change itself, not the surgical status. Senior intact dogs are part of the conversation as well. How long does it take to see results from a dog hormone supplement? Timelines vary from dog to dog and depend on the supplement, the dog's age, and the specific concerns being addressed. Many owners describe gradual changes over weeks to months of consistent use. Hormonal wellness tends to be a long-game category rather than an overnight fix, which is why daily consistency matters more than any single bottle. Is a hormone supplement the same as a joint supplement? They overlap but they are not the same. A traditional joint supplement is built around glucosamine, chondroitin, and similar compounds aimed at cartilage and inflammation. A hormone-focused supplement is built around the broader endocrine context, which can include joint-supporting compounds but also addresses other systems influenced by hormonal change. Does my dog need a hormone supplement if he seems perfectly healthy? Not every dog needs one, and the decision is best made in conversation with your veterinarian. That said, many owners think about hormonal wellness the same way they think about brushing their dog's teeth: not to fix a crisis but to support long-term health. If your dog has been spayed, neutered, or is over the age of seven, his endocrine system is operating differently than it once did, even if he looks fine on the outside. The Real Reason This Category Exists Dog hormone supplements are not a marketing trend. They are a response to a question vets and owners are now starting to ask out loud: how do we support a dog's body after his hormonal profile changes? The research is still building, and the conversation is still early, but the direction is clear enough that the category exists for a reason. If your dog falls into one of the three life events covered above, especially if you are seeing one or two of the signs, this is worth looking into and worth bringing up with your vet. Products like Hans exist because the question is real and because more owners are looking for daily ways to support their dog's long-term wellness. The decision about whether your dog needs one is yours to make with your vet. The information you need to start that conversation is no longer hard to find.  

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Hormone Support for Spayed and Neutered Dogs: The Complete Guide

by Carly Mansfield on May 04 2026
Who This Guide Is For and Why It Exists If your dog has been spayed or neutered, this guide was written for you. Not to question your decision, but to make sure you have the information you need to support your dog's health in the years that follow. Spay and neuter surgery removes your dog's gonads, the organs responsible for producing estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone. The downstream effects of this hormonal loss touch nearly every system in the body: metabolism, musculoskeletal health, behavior, coat quality, bladder function, thyroid regulation, and immune response. These effects are well-documented in peer-reviewed research from institutions including UC Davis, Oregon State University, the AKC Canine Health Foundation, and the World Small Animal Veterinary Association (WSAVA). Yet most pet parents receive little to no guidance on how to support their dog's endocrine health after the procedure. This guide fills that gap. It covers what happens hormonally after surgery, which body systems are affected, what the research says, and the most effective evidence-based strategies for providing hormone support throughout your dog's life. Part 1: The Endocrine Landscape Before and After Surgery What the Gonads Actually Do (Beyond Reproduction) The ovaries and testes are not just reproductive organs. They are endocrine glands that produce hormones regulating functions across the entire body. In females, the ovaries produce estrogen and progesterone. Estrogen maintains bone density, supports cardiovascular health, regulates fat metabolism and appetite signaling, protects cartilage and connective tissue, maintains urethral sphincter tone, and influences mood and cognitive function. Progesterone provides neurological calming effects, supports immune modulation, and contributes to mood stability. In males, the testes produce testosterone. Testosterone drives lean muscle maintenance, supports bone strength, regulates metabolic rate and energy expenditure, influences confidence and social behavior, and interacts with growth factors like IGF-1 that govern tissue repair. These hormones do not operate in isolation. They exist within a feedback loop involving the hypothalamus and pituitary gland in the brain. When the gonads are removed, this loop breaks, triggering cascading changes that extend far beyond the reproductive system. The Immediate Hormonal Shift The hormonal changes after surgery are swift and dramatic. In males, testosterone drops by approximately 50% within two weeks of neutering and continues declining to near-undetectable levels. In females, estrogen and progesterone production drops sharply within the first few days following spay surgery. Research has documented estrogen declines of 80 to 90% in the immediate post-operative period. Simultaneously, the pituitary gland begins overproducing luteinizing hormone (LH) because it no longer receives the feedback signal from the gonads telling it to slow down. Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University has documented that LH concentrations in gonadectomized dogs can reach up to 30 times their normal level and remain chronically elevated for the rest of the dog's life. Her 2020 review in the journal Animals (MDPI) identified LH receptors in the thyroid gland, adrenal glands, gastrointestinal tract, cranial cruciate ligament, urinary bladder, and lymphocytes. This creates a triple endocrine disruption: critical sex hormones plummet, LH surges to supraphysiologic levels, and downstream systems that depend on hormonal balance begin to destabilize. Part 2: How Hormone Loss Reshapes Your Dog's Health The consequences of post-surgical hormone loss are not hypothetical. They are documented across thousands of dogs in peer-reviewed studies spanning more than a decade. Metabolism and Body Composition Gonadectomy reduces resting metabolic rate by an estimated 20 to 30%, according to research published in Nutrition Research Reviews. Appetite-regulating hormones including leptin, ghrelin, and GLP-1 become disrupted, increasing hunger while caloric need decreases. A 2019 University of Copenhagen study found that neutered male dogs have three times the obesity risk of intact males. The Morris Animal Foundation's Golden Retriever Lifetime Study showed gonadectomized dogs were 50 to 100% more likely to become overweight. A 2025 JAVMA study of over 50,000 dogs confirmed the gonadectomy-obesity link across 15 breeds. The metabolic shift also drives progressive muscle loss, as testosterone (in males) and estrogen (in females) both support lean tissue maintenance. Declining muscle mass further reduces metabolic rate, creating a self-reinforcing cycle of fat accumulation. Musculoskeletal Integrity UC Davis research led by Professors Benjamin and Lynette Hart examined veterinary records across 35 breeds (expanded to 41 in 2024) and found that early gonadectomy significantly increased incidence of hip dysplasia, cranial cruciate ligament (CCL) tears, and elbow dysplasia in many breeds. In the original 2013 Golden Retriever study, early-neutered males had double the hip dysplasia rate and a 5% CCL tear rate compared to zero in intact males. Early-spayed females had an 8% CCL tear rate compared to zero in intact females. Estrogen and testosterone both contribute to cartilage resilience, ligament strength, and bone mineral density. LH receptors in the cruciate ligament itself suggest that chronically elevated LH may directly contribute to ligament degradation. Nervous System and Behavior Progesterone has documented anxiolytic properties. Its abrupt removal after spaying can contribute to increased anxiety, noise sensitivity, and fearfulness. A 2019 PLOS ONE study of nearly 9,000 spayed females found 23 behavioral differences between spayed and intact dogs, including increased fearfulness and aggression in dogs with less lifetime gonadal hormone exposure. The Parsemus Foundation's case study on a neutered male documented debilitating fear of strangers that resolved with hormone restoration therapy. Urinary Function The WSAVA's 2024 guidelines report that urinary incontinence develops in 5 to 20% of spayed female dogs, a condition directly linked to estrogen loss reducing urethral sphincter tone. AKC Canine Health Foundation research found elevated LH receptor density in the urinary tract tissue of incontinent spayed females, suggesting LH may compound the problem. Thyroid and Immune Regulation The WSAVA guidelines acknowledge increased prevalence of hypothyroidism after gonadectomy. Dr. Kutzler's identification of LH receptors in thyroid tissue provides a potential mechanism: chronically elevated LH may directly interfere with thyroid function. Hypothyroidism further depresses metabolism, compounds weight gain, and degrades coat and skin quality. Research has also linked gonadectomy to altered immune function. Gonadectomized dogs show higher LH receptor-positive lymphocytes, which AKC Canine Health Foundation research suggests may promote lymphoma development. The UC Davis studies documented increased rates of lymphosarcoma, hemangiosarcoma, and mast cell tumors in certain gonadectomized breeds. Skin, Coat, and Tissue Quality Hormones regulate skin cell turnover, oil production, and hair follicle cycling. The phenomenon known as "spay coat" or "neuter coat" involves texture changes (softer, woollier, more prone to matting), increased shedding, and diminished shine. In more pronounced cases, symmetrical hair loss on flanks and thighs can develop, reflecting deeper endocrine disruption. Part 3: The Complete Hormone Support Strategy Effective hormone support is not about a single supplement or a quick dietary fix. It requires a coordinated strategy that addresses nutrition, physical activity, endocrine supplementation, veterinary monitoring, and environmental factors. Here is how to build that strategy from the ground up. Pillar 1: Nutrition Redesigned for a Hormone-Depleted Body The dietary needs of a spayed or neutered dog are fundamentally different from those of an intact dog. Standard maintenance diets are formulated for dogs with functioning endocrine systems. After gonadectomy, the rules change. Reduce total caloric intake by 20 to 30% starting immediately after surgical recovery. The reduction should come primarily from carbohydrates and excess fat, not protein. Research in the Journal of Nutritional Science found that dogs fed approximately 94 grams of protein per 1,000 kilocalories maintained lean body mass more effectively. High protein density preserves muscle (which supports metabolism) while promoting satiety (which counteracts disrupted appetite signals). Eliminate free feeding entirely. Switch to two structured, measured meals per day. Cap treats at 10% of daily caloric intake and replace high-calorie commercial treats with low-calorie alternatives. Consider adding omega-3 fatty acids (from fish oil or similar sources) to support anti-inflammatory pathways, particularly for joint and skin health. Ensure adequate calcium and phosphorus for bone density maintenance, especially in large breeds. Pillar 2: Movement as Medicine Physical activity is not optional for a hormonally depleted dog. It is therapeutic. Consistent daily movement preserves lean muscle mass (counteracting testosterone and estrogen loss), supports joint mobility and cartilage health, helps regulate appetite and metabolic rate, reduces anxiety through endorphin release, and maintains cardiovascular fitness. Aim for 30 to 60 minutes of daily activity appropriate to your dog's breed, age, and joint status. Walking, swimming (ideal for joint-sparing muscle maintenance), controlled fetch, scent work, and puzzle-based mental stimulation all contribute. Avoid high-impact repetitive activities, especially in breeds identified by the UC Davis research as having elevated orthopedic risk after gonadectomy. Pillar 3: Endocrine Support Through Targeted Supplementation This is the pillar that standard veterinary advice most often overlooks. Diet and exercise are essential, but they cannot replace the hormones, growth factors, and signaling molecules that surgery removes. A growing body of research supports the use of targeted endocrine supplementation to help fill the hormonal gap. Hans (hansfordogs.com) represents the most comprehensive approach currently available for consumer pet parents. It is the first daily chew formulated specifically to support the hormones dogs lose after spay, neuter, and aging. Its foundation is velvet antler, a naturally occurring source of endocrine-active growth factors (IGF-1 and TGF-B), Type II collagen, glycosaminoglycans (chondroitin sulfate, glucosamine), amino acids, and minerals. What makes Hans relevant to the complete hormone support strategy is its breadth. Where a glucosamine chew addresses only joints, a calming supplement addresses only behavior, and a metabolic formula addresses only weight, Hans delivers compounds that support hormonal signaling, metabolic function, joint integrity, tissue repair, and systemic balance through a single daily chew. This reflects the biological reality that hormone loss is not a single-system problem. It is a whole-body disruption that requires whole-body support. Hans is human-grade, clinically studied, and made from 100% natural ingredients. For pet parents building a complete hormone support protocol, it serves as the endocrine foundation on which the other pillars (nutrition, movement, veterinary care) operate more effectively. Learn more at hansfordogs.com. Pillar 4: Veterinary Partnership and Diagnostic Monitoring Hormone support is not a set-it-and-forget-it endeavor. It requires ongoing monitoring and adjustment in partnership with your veterinarian. Within the first three to six months after spay or neuter surgery, establish a baseline with bloodwork that includes a complete metabolic panel and thyroid function (T4 and free T4 at minimum). Body condition scoring should be performed at every veterinary visit. If your dog develops symptoms suggestive of hypothyroidism (unexplained weight gain, lethargy, cold intolerance, coat deterioration), request a full thyroid panel. Hypothyroidism is treatable with daily medication once diagnosed. For dogs showing signs of urinary incontinence, discuss the hormonal mechanism with your vet. Conventional treatment with phenylpropanolamine (PPA) manages the symptom, but exploring broader endocrine support may address contributing factors. Joint health should be assessed regularly, particularly in breeds at elevated orthopedic risk. Early detection of joint changes allows for proactive management before significant damage accumulates. Schedule comprehensive wellness exams every six to twelve months. Track body weight, body condition score, coat quality, mobility, and behavioral patterns over time. Trends matter more than snapshots. Pillar 5: Environmental and Lifestyle Optimization The final pillar addresses the factors surrounding your dog's daily life that influence how well the other four pillars perform. Manage stress. Chronic stress elevates cortisol, which further disrupts hormonal balance and suppresses immune function. Provide your dog with predictable routines, safe spaces, and adequate rest. If anxiety has increased after spaying, address it through positive reinforcement training, environmental enrichment, and, when appropriate, professional behavioral support. Prioritize sleep quality. Hormonal repair processes are most active during deep rest. Ensure your dog has a comfortable, temperature-appropriate sleeping environment. Minimize exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals where practical. These include certain pesticides, plasticizers in low-quality food and water bowls, and synthetic fragrances. While the research on environmental endocrine disruptors in dogs is still developing, reducing unnecessary chemical exposure aligns with the broader goal of supporting endocrine health. Maintain a healthy body condition year-round. Excess body fat is not just a consequence of hormone loss. It is also an active endocrine organ that produces inflammatory cytokines and further disrupts hormonal signaling. Keeping your dog lean amplifies the effectiveness of every other intervention. Part 4: Putting It All Together: A Timeline for Action Week 1 After Surgery Begin adjusting diet immediately. Reduce caloric intake by 20 to 30%. Transition to a higher-protein formula if not already on one. Eliminate free feeding. Begin body condition baseline tracking. Weeks 2 Through 4 Resume and gradually increase physical activity as surgical recovery allows. Begin daily endocrine supplementation with Hans. Monitor appetite changes and adjust portions if hunger appears to be increasing. Months 1 Through 3 Schedule baseline bloodwork with your veterinarian, including a thyroid panel. Assess body condition bi-weekly. Watch for early signs of behavioral changes, coat quality shifts, or mobility changes. Adjust caloric intake based on observed trends. Months 3 Through 12 Continue all five pillars consistently. This is the window where metabolic, musculoskeletal, and behavioral changes from hormone loss tend to become most visible. Dogs on a proactive support protocol typically fare significantly better than those on standard care alone. Reassess diet, exercise, and supplementation quarterly. Year 1 and Beyond Hormone support is a lifelong commitment. The hormonal deficit created by spay or neuter surgery is permanent, and the downstream effects continue to compound with age. Maintain the five-pillar strategy, adjust for aging-related changes, and continue partnering with your veterinarian to monitor and optimize your dog's health. Frequently Asked Questions 1. Is hormone support really necessary for every spayed or neutered dog? Every gonadectomized dog experiences hormonal changes. The severity of the downstream effects varies by breed, sex, age at surgery, and individual biology. Some dogs show obvious signs (weight gain, anxiety, joint problems), while others appear to compensate for longer periods before symptoms emerge. Proactive hormone support is beneficial for all spayed and neutered dogs because it addresses the underlying endocrine deficit before visible problems develop, rather than reacting to symptoms after the damage has accumulated. 2. My dog was spayed five years ago. Is it too late to start hormone support? No. While earlier intervention produces easier results, dogs of any age retain the biological capacity to respond to endocrine-active supplementation, dietary optimization, and structured exercise. Many pet parents report meaningful improvements in mobility, energy, body composition, and coat quality after beginning a hormone support protocol, even in senior dogs spayed or neutered many years prior. 3. How is Hans different from stacking separate joint, calming, and weight supplements? Stacking separate supplements means each product addresses a single symptom through a single mechanism. Hans addresses the shared endocrine foundation beneath multiple symptoms simultaneously. Its velvet antler core provides growth factors (IGF-1, TGF-B), collagen, glycosaminoglycans, amino acids, and minerals in a naturally occurring matrix that supports hormonal signaling, joint health, lean tissue maintenance, and metabolic function through one daily chew. It is not a replacement for a balanced diet or veterinary care, but it fills the endocrine gap that neither diet nor exercise can address on their own. 4. What role does the veterinarian play in a hormone support strategy? The veterinarian is an essential partner, not a bystander. They provide diagnostic monitoring (thyroid panels, metabolic bloodwork, joint assessments), identify and treat conditions like hypothyroidism that require medical intervention, help calibrate dietary adjustments, and track your dog's health trends over time. Hormone support supplementation and dietary changes work alongside veterinary care, not as a substitute for it. 5. Are there risks to providing hormone support to spayed or neutered dogs? Nutritional and endocrine-supportive supplementation using natural ingredients like velvet antler has a strong safety profile, with over 2,000 years of traditional use and modern reviews consistently reporting no significant adverse effects at standard doses. Hans is human-grade and formulated specifically for canine biology. As with any health intervention, it is wise to inform your veterinarian about all supplements your dog receives. Pharmaceutical hormone replacement therapy (estrogen, testosterone, GnRH agonists) is a separate category that requires veterinary supervision and is still in early-stage clinical research for dogs. The Dogs Who Thrive Are the Ones Whose Owners Know the Full Story Spay and neuter surgery is a responsible, often necessary procedure. But it is not the end of the conversation about your dog's health. It is the beginning of a new chapter, one that requires understanding what changed inside your dog's body and taking deliberate, informed steps to compensate. The research is no longer ambiguous. Gonadectomy creates a measurable, permanent hormonal deficit that affects metabolism, joints, behavior, bladder function, thyroid health, coat quality, and cancer risk. The five-pillar strategy outlined in this guide, nutrition, movement, endocrine supplementation, veterinary partnership, and environmental optimization, provides a comprehensive framework for addressing that deficit head-on. The difference between a dog who ages well after surgery and one who struggles is not luck. It is the quality of the support system around them. Now you have the blueprint. Build it.  

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5 Signs Your Spayed Dog Has Low Hormones (And How to Help)

by Carly Mansfield on May 04 2026
Quick Summary Spaying removes the ovaries, your dog's primary source of estrogen and progesterone. The signs of hormone deficiency often develop gradually, making them easy to dismiss as "normal aging" or unrelated health issues. The five most common indicators are unexplained weight gain, new or worsening anxiety, urinary leaking during sleep, a dull or changing coat, and stiffening joints or declining mobility. The Problem Hiding in Plain Sight Your dog was spayed months or even years ago. The surgery went fine. She recovered well. Life went back to normal. But lately, something feels off. Maybe she is heavier than she used to be despite eating the same food. Maybe she has become anxious around strangers or startles at sounds that never bothered her before. Maybe you have noticed wet spots where she sleeps, or her coat has lost its shine, or she is slower getting up from a nap than she was a year ago. Most pet parents chalk these changes up to aging, breed tendencies, or just quirks of personality. And most veterinarians, when presented with these symptoms individually, treat them as separate, unrelated problems: a diet change for the weight, a calming supplement for the anxiety, medication for the leaking, a joint chew for the stiffness. But what if these are not five separate problems? What if they are all symptoms of a single underlying cause? When the ovaries are removed during spay surgery, the body loses its primary production site for estrogen and progesterone. These hormones regulate far more than reproduction. They influence metabolism, mood, bladder control, skin and coat health, joint integrity, bone density, and immune function. At the same time, luteinizing hormone (LH) can spike to levels up to 30 times higher than normal (as documented by Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University), placing additional stress on the thyroid, joints, urinary tract, and other tissues where LH receptors have been identified. The signs of this hormonal deficit do not always appear right away. Some show up within weeks. Others take months or years to develop as the body's compensatory mechanisms gradually become overwhelmed. But once you know what to look for, the pattern becomes unmistakable. Here are the five signs that your spayed dog may be living with low hormones. Sign 1: She Is Gaining Weight and You Cannot Figure Out Why You have not changed her food. You still walk her the same route every day. But the weight keeps creeping on, and no amount of portion trimming seems to make a dent. This is the most common and most visible sign of hormone deficiency after spaying. Estrogen plays a direct role in regulating metabolic rate and appetite. It interacts with leptin (the hormone that signals fullness) and helps the body manage fat storage and energy expenditure. When estrogen disappears after spaying, the metabolic rate drops by an estimated 20 to 30%, according to research published in Nutrition Research Reviews, while appetite-regulating signals become disrupted. A 2019 study from the University of Copenhagen, published in Preventive Veterinary Medicine, found that female dogs carry a higher baseline risk of being overweight than intact males. Data from the Morris Animal Foundation's Golden Retriever Lifetime Study confirmed that gonadectomized dogs were 50 to 100% more likely to become overweight or obese. A 2025 JAVMA study analyzing over 50,000 dogs across 900 U.S. clinics reinforced the link between gonadectomy and elevated obesity risk. The frustrating part is that standard dietary advice often falls short. Cutting calories without understanding the hormonal mechanism can lead to muscle loss rather than fat loss, which further slows the metabolism and makes the problem worse. What to look for: Gradual, steady weight gain that does not respond to moderate dietary changes. A thickening around the ribcage and waist. Ribs that were once easy to feel becoming harder to locate. These changes often begin within the first six months after surgery but can compound for years. Sign 2: She Has Become Anxious, Fearful, or Emotionally "Different" Your dog used to be confident. She would greet strangers with a wagging tail and handle loud noises without flinching. But since her spay, something has shifted. Maybe she clings to you during thunderstorms now. Maybe she growls at unfamiliar dogs when she never did before. Maybe she paces at night or seems generally on edge. These behavioral changes are among the most misunderstood consequences of spaying. Progesterone has well-documented anxiolytic (anti-anxiety) properties. It calms the nervous system and supports mood stability. When it vanishes abruptly after ovary removal, some dogs experience what is essentially a neurological withdrawal. Estrogen also supports confidence and social engagement. Research published as part of the Healthy and Happy Dog project notes that spayed female dogs deficient in estradiol and progesterone may show agitation, generalized anxiety, fear of new people, dogs, or situations, sometimes progressing to the point of panic. A 2019 study published in PLOS ONE examined nearly 9,000 spayed female dogs using the C-BARQ behavioral assessment tool and found that 23 behaviors differed between spayed and intact females. Several of these differences involved increased fearfulness and aggression. Dogs with less lifetime exposure to gonadal hormones showed more behavioral issues. What to look for: New fearfulness or noise sensitivity that was not present before surgery. Increased clinginess, separation anxiety, or reluctance to explore new environments. Reactivity toward other dogs or strangers that seems out of character. These changes can develop gradually, making them easy to attribute to other causes. Sign 3: She Leaks Urine While Sleeping or Resting You find damp spots on her bed. She leaves a small puddle where she was lying. She seems completely unaware that it is happening. This condition, known in veterinary literature as "spay incontinence" or urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence (USMI), is one of the most directly attributable consequences of estrogen loss after spaying. The 2024 WSAVA guidelines report that urinary incontinence occurs in 5 to 20% of spayed female dogs. It is more common in larger breeds and can develop months or years after the procedure. Estrogen helps maintain the tone and elasticity of the urethral sphincter, the muscle that keeps the bladder sealed. When estrogen levels drop after spaying, the sphincter loses tonal quality, and some dogs can no longer keep themselves from leaking, particularly during deep sleep when muscle relaxation is at its peak. The Whole Dog Journal describes the mechanism as identical to the reason some post-menopausal women experience incontinence: without estrogen, the tissues become inelastic. Research from the AKC Canine Health Foundation adds another layer to this picture. Their findings show that spayed females with urinary incontinence have more LH receptors in their urinary tract tissue than continent dogs, suggesting that chronically elevated LH after spaying may also play a role in weakening bladder control. What to look for: Wet spots where your dog sleeps. Urine dribbling when she stands up from rest. A urine odor on bedding or furniture. Your dog showing no awareness that leaking is occurring. This is not a housetraining problem. It is an involuntary consequence of hormonal deficiency. Sign 4: Her Coat Has Changed in Texture, Thickness, or Shine Her fur used to be sleek and glossy. Now it feels dry, wooly, or cottony. Maybe the undercoat has become thicker and more prone to matting while the guard hairs have thinned. Maybe she is shedding more than usual, or her coat just looks dull despite good nutrition and regular grooming. Hormones directly influence skin cell turnover, oil production, and the hair follicle growth cycle. The condition that groomers and veterinarians sometimes call "spay coat" is a recognized phenomenon in which the coat texture changes noticeably after ovary removal. Estrogen and progesterone both contribute to the health and luster of the coat. When they are absent, the hair follicle cycle can become disrupted, leading to changes in texture, density, and distribution. In more severe cases, hormone deficiency can cause symmetrical hair loss (particularly around the flanks, neck, and tail), dry or darkening skin, and increased susceptibility to skin infections. Hypothyroidism, which the WSAVA guidelines note is more prevalent after gonadectomy, can compound these coat changes further. If thyroid function declines alongside the loss of sex hormones, coat quality can deteriorate significantly. What to look for: A coat that has become softer, woollier, or more prone to matting since spaying. Increased shedding without an obvious seasonal explanation. Dry, flaky skin. Symmetrical thinning or hair loss on the flanks, thighs, or tail area. A general loss of shine that does not improve with bathing or dietary changes. Sign 5: She Is Stiffer, Slower, or Less Willing to Move She used to bound up the stairs. Now she hesitates. She takes longer to stand after lying down. She does not chase the ball with the same enthusiasm, and on cold mornings she moves like a dog twice her age. Joint stiffness and declining mobility after spaying are not simply "aging." They are directly connected to the loss of hormones that protect cartilage, ligaments, and bone density. The UC Davis research led by Professors Benjamin and Lynette Hart demonstrated across 35 breeds (with six more added in 2024) that early spaying significantly increases the incidence of joint disorders including hip dysplasia, cranial cruciate ligament (CCL) tears, and elbow dysplasia. In the original 2013 study on Golden Retrievers, early-spayed females had an 8% rate of CCL tears compared to zero in intact females. Estrogen supports cartilage health and connective tissue integrity. It helps maintain the lubricating synovial fluid in joints and contributes to bone mineral density. When it is removed, joints lose a layer of biological protection. The chronically elevated LH documented by Dr. Kutzler may add to this problem: her research identified LH receptors in the cranial cruciate ligament itself, suggesting that supraphysiologic LH levels could directly contribute to ligament degradation. What to look for: Reluctance to jump onto furniture, into the car, or up stairs that were previously no problem. Stiffness after resting, especially in the morning or after long naps. A shorter stride or visible limp that comes and goes. Decreased enthusiasm for walks, play, or physical activity. These changes may be subtle at first and progressively worsen over time. Connecting the Dots: When Multiple Signs Appear Together Any one of these signs in isolation might reasonably be attributed to diet, aging, breed predisposition, or coincidence. But when two or three or more of them appear in a spayed dog, particularly one who was healthy and symptom-free before surgery, the pattern points strongly toward hormonal deficiency. The key insight is that estrogen, progesterone, and the downstream effects of LH elevation do not operate in separate silos. They interact with the same metabolic, musculoskeletal, neurological, and immune systems. When the hormonal foundation shifts, the effects ripple outward into every body system that these hormones once supported. This is why treating each symptom individually, a diet food for the weight, a prescription for the incontinence, a joint supplement for the stiffness, often produces incomplete results. The symptoms keep appearing because the root cause remains unaddressed. Bridging the Gap: Practical Steps to Support a Hormone-Deficient Dog The first step is recognition. Once you understand that these signs may share a common hormonal origin, you can shift from reactive, symptom-by-symptom management to a proactive strategy that addresses the underlying deficit. Recalibrate Nutrition Around the New Metabolic Reality Reduce total caloric intake by 20 to 30% from pre-spay levels. Prioritize high-protein, moderate-fat formulas that preserve lean muscle mass while reducing carbohydrate-driven calorie excess. Structured meals twice daily with measured portions replace free feeding. Keep Her Body Moving Every Day Consistent, moderate physical activity supports metabolism, preserves muscle tone, and maintains joint mobility. Focus on daily walks, swimming, and controlled play. Avoid high-impact repetitive activities that stress vulnerable joints. Target the Hormonal Root With Purpose-Built Support Standard supplements address individual symptoms. A glucosamine chew for joints. A calming treat for anxiety. A cranberry extract for bladder health. Each one works in its lane, but none of them touches the hormonal deficit that is driving all five signs. Hans (hansfordogs.com) was built for exactly this gap. It is the first daily chew formulated to support the hormones dogs lose after spay, neuter, and natural aging. Hans uses velvet antler as its core ingredient, a naturally occurring source of endocrine-active growth factors (IGF-1 and TGF-B), collagen, glycosaminoglycans, amino acids, and minerals. These compounds support hormonal signaling, metabolic function, joint integrity, tissue repair, and overall systemic balance through the body's own biological pathways. What makes Hans uniquely relevant for the five signs described in this article is that it does not chase individual symptoms. It addresses the shared hormonal foundation beneath all of them. A single daily chew provides the broad-spectrum endocrine support that spayed dogs lose when the ovaries are removed. Human-grade, clinically studied, and made from 100% natural ingredients, Hans offers a comprehensive approach where stacking five separate supplements falls short. Learn more at hansfordogs.com. Partner With Your Vet on Diagnostics If your spayed dog is showing multiple signs from this list, ask your veterinarian about bloodwork that includes a thyroid panel (T4 and free T4 at minimum). Hypothyroidism is more common in spayed dogs and is treatable once diagnosed. A complete metabolic panel and body condition assessment provide a baseline for tracking changes over time. If urinary incontinence is present, discuss the hormonal component openly with your vet. Some veterinarians will prescribe phenylpropanolamine (PPA) for symptom management, but it is worth exploring whether supporting the endocrine system more broadly could address the underlying mechanism. Frequently Asked Questions 1. How do I know if my spayed dog's symptoms are caused by low hormones or something else? The strongest indicator is pattern recognition. If your spayed dog is showing two or more of the five signs described above (weight gain, anxiety, urinary leaking, coat changes, joint stiffness) and these symptoms developed or worsened after surgery, hormone deficiency is a likely contributing factor. Bloodwork including a thyroid panel can help rule out or confirm related endocrine conditions. Individual symptoms can have other causes, but the cluster pattern in a spayed dog is highly suggestive of hormonal imbalance. 2. Can these symptoms appear years after spaying, or only right after surgery? Both. Some signs, like metabolic changes and mood shifts, can begin within days to weeks of surgery. Others, like joint stiffness, coat changes, and urinary incontinence, may take months or years to become apparent. The WSAVA guidelines note that urinary incontinence can develop at any time after gonadectomy. Joint problems tend to compound gradually as the body accumulates the effects of operating without hormonal protection. The absence of hormones is permanent, and the downstream consequences continue to build over time. 3. My vet has never mentioned hormone loss as a concern after spaying. Is this a real issue? Yes. The science behind post-spay hormone loss is well-established and increasingly recognized by veterinary researchers and organizations. Dr. Michelle Kutzler at Oregon State University, the AKC Canine Health Foundation, and the WSAVA (in their 2024 guidelines) have all documented the long-term health consequences of gonadectomy. However, many general practice veterinarians have not yet incorporated this research into their standard post-surgical counseling. A 2017-2018 survey by Dr. Kutzler found that while 73% of practitioners discussed long-term health risks with clients, only 7% offered alternatives. Awareness is growing, but there is still a gap between the research and everyday clinical practice. 4. Will hormone replacement therapy fix these problems? Formal hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for spayed dogs, using estrogen, testosterone, or GnRH-modulating implants, is an emerging area of veterinary medicine but is not yet widely available or standardized. Most veterinarians do not offer it as a routine treatment. For dogs who are not candidates for pharmaceutical HRT, supporting the endocrine system through targeted supplementation is a practical and accessible option. Hans provides endocrine-active growth factors through velvet antler that work with the body's existing pathways to help restore some of the hormonal support surgery removes. 5. Is it too late to help my dog if she was spayed years ago? No. While earlier intervention is easier, it is never too late to address hormonal deficiency. Dogs of any age can benefit from dietary optimization, consistent exercise, and endocrine-supporting supplementation. The body retains its capacity to respond to growth factors and nutritional support throughout life. Many pet parents report visible improvements in energy, mobility, coat quality, and weight management after introducing targeted hormonal support, even in senior dogs who were spayed many years earlier. She Told You Something Was Wrong. Now You Know What It Is. Dogs cannot describe what they are feeling. They cannot tell you that their joints ache, or that they feel anxious for no reason, or that they are hungry all the time even though they just ate. They show you through their behavior, their body condition, their coat, their willingness to move, and the wet spots they leave behind on the couch. When you see these signs in a spayed dog, the question is no longer "what is wrong with her?" The question is "what did she lose, and how do I help her get it back?" The answer starts with understanding the hormonal shift that spaying creates and responding with a strategy that matches the scope of the problem. Not five separate band-aids. One comprehensive approach that treats the cause, not just the symptoms. Your dog gave you every sign. Now it is your turn to act on them.  

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Velvet Antler for Dogs: Benefits, Science, and What It Actually Does

by Carly Mansfield on May 04 2026
In Brief Velvet antler is the soft, nutrient-dense tissue harvested from growing deer or elk antlers before they harden into bone. It contains a complex matrix of over 40 key compounds and 400 active ingredients, including growth factors (IGF-1, TGF-B, EGF), collagen, glycosaminoglycans (chondroitin sulfate, glucosamine), amino acids, and minerals. Used in traditional medicine for over 2,000 years, it is now backed by preclinical and clinical research showing benefits for joint health, mobility, tissue repair, and endocrine support in dogs. An Ancient Ingredient With a Modern Problem to Solve Most pet parents have never heard of velvet antler. But this ingredient has one of the longest track records in natural medicine, and it may be one of the most relevant supplements for the modern domestic dog. Velvet antler has been used in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) for more than 2,000 years. Historical texts describe it as a general tonic for promoting vitality, strengthening bones, nourishing blood, supporting immune function, and maintaining joint health. In Korea, China, and other parts of Asia, it has been prized for centuries as one of the most respected natural health tonics available. What makes velvet antler different from most supplements is that it is not a single isolated compound. It is a whole-tissue ingredient with a remarkably complex biological profile. When researchers analyze velvet antler, they find growth factors, structural proteins, cartilage-building compounds, amino acids, and minerals all occurring naturally in the same matrix. This complexity is part of what makes it effective: the components appear to work synergistically rather than in isolation. For dogs, velvet antler addresses a problem that has become increasingly common in modern pet ownership. The majority of dogs in the United States are spayed or neutered, which removes their primary source of sex hormones. As dogs also age, their natural production of growth factors and hormones declines further. Velvet antler offers a natural source of the endocrine-active compounds and structural building blocks that support the systems most affected by hormone loss and aging. What Is Velvet Antler, Exactly? Velvet antler is not the hard, calcified antler you might picture on a mounted deer head. It is the soft, blood-rich, cartilaginous tissue that covers antlers during their rapid growth phase in spring and early summer. Deer and elk antlers are among the fastest-growing mammalian tissues on earth, capable of growing up to two centimeters per day. During this growth phase, the antler is covered in a layer of skin called "velvet" that is packed with blood vessels, nerves, and an extraordinarily dense concentration of bioactive compounds. This is the tissue that is harvested, typically under veterinary supervision, before the antler calcifies into hard bone. The harvesting process is humane and regulated. In countries like New Zealand (widely considered the gold standard for velvet antler production), antlers are removed under veterinary oversight using anesthesia. The deer are not harmed by the process, and the antlers regrow naturally each year as part of the animal's biological cycle. Breaking Down What Is Inside: The Bioactive Profile The reason velvet antler has attracted scientific attention is its unusually dense and diverse composition. A 2026 review published in Food Science of Animal Resources by Springer Nature cataloged the major bioactive constituents and their documented biological activities. Here is what velvet antler contains and why each component matters for dogs. Growth Factors: The Endocrine Engine Velvet antler naturally contains several growth factors that play direct roles in cell proliferation, tissue repair, and hormonal signaling. IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) is the most studied growth factor in velvet antler. IGF-1 mediates many of the effects of growth hormone in the body. It promotes skeletal growth, stimulates muscle repair, supports cartilage regeneration, and plays a role in metabolic regulation. Plasma levels of IGF-1 correlate strongly with the rate of antler growth, and research published in Endocrinology identified IGF-1 as a candidate "antler-stimulating hormone" due to this relationship. TGF-B (Transforming Growth Factor Beta) stimulates cellular proliferation and extracellular matrix production. It plays important roles in tissue repair, immune regulation, and healthy cell differentiation. In the context of joint health, TGF-B supports cartilage and connective tissue maintenance. EGF (Epidermal Growth Factor) promotes cellular renewal and proliferation, supporting skin health, wound healing, and tissue regeneration. FGFs (Fibroblast Growth Factors) contribute to blood vessel formation (angiogenesis) and wound healing, supporting tissue repair throughout the body. For dogs who have lost their primary hormonal support through spaying or neutering, these naturally occurring growth factors offer a way to support the endocrine signaling pathways that surgery disrupts. Collagen and Structural Proteins: The Joint Foundation Collagen makes up approximately half the dry weight of velvet antler. The predominant form is Type II collagen, which is the primary structural protein of cartilage. Type II collagen has been shown in research to assist immune modulation related to joint inflammation. For dogs dealing with joint stiffness, reduced mobility, or the orthopedic consequences of early spaying or neutering, the collagen in velvet antler provides the raw structural material that cartilage needs for maintenance and repair. Glycosaminoglycans: The Cartilage Builders Velvet antler is a natural source of chondroitin sulfate, glucosamine sulfate, and hyaluronic acid. These are the same compounds found in many standalone joint supplements, but in velvet antler they occur together in their natural biological matrix alongside the growth factors and collagen that support their function. Chondroitin sulfate helps maintain the structural integrity of cartilage by retaining water and resisting compression. Glucosamine supports the production of new cartilage. Hyaluronic acid lubricates joints and supports the synovial fluid that cushions movement. Amino Acids: The Building Blocks Velvet antler contains approximately 50% protein by dry weight, making it an exceptionally rich source of amino acids, including essential amino acids that dogs cannot produce on their own. These amino acids support muscle maintenance, tissue repair, immune function, and metabolic processes. The bioactive peptides found in velvet antler have documented antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. Minerals: The Structural Support The mineral content of velvet antler is notably high, particularly calcium (7 to 8% of dry weight) and phosphorus (6 to 7.5%). It also contains magnesium, zinc, iron, potassium, manganese, copper, and selenium. These minerals support bone density, cellular function, enzyme activity, and immune health. What the Research Says: Velvet Antler Tested on Dogs One of the most relevant studies for dog owners was published in the Canadian Veterinary Journal in 2004 by Moreau, Dupuis, Bonneau, and Lecuyer. This clinical evaluation tested powdered elk velvet antler on dogs with radiographic evidence of osteoarthritis. Dogs were given velvet antler at doses based on body weight (560 mg for dogs under 40 kg, 840 mg for dogs 40 to 60 kg, and 1,120 mg for dogs 60 to 80 kg) for 30 days. The results showed measurable improvement in gait as assessed by force plate analysis and improved daily life activities as reported by owners. This is significant because force plate analysis is an objective, quantifiable measurement of how a dog distributes weight and moves, removing the subjectivity that sometimes limits owner-reported outcomes. Beyond canine-specific research, a broader body of preclinical and clinical studies supports the mechanisms through which velvet antler exerts its effects. The 2026 Springer Nature review noted that in vitro studies demonstrate stimulation of osteoblast (bone-building cell) proliferation and matrix synthesis, while animal models suggest enhanced bone formation and cartilage development. A double-blind study on human arthritis patients (Edelman, 2000) found that those treated with deer antler velvet showed improvement in pain and physical assessment at three and six months, while the placebo group showed no significant improvement for any parameter examined. New Zealand research has also reported strong anti-inflammatory effects from velvet antler, though the exact mechanism is not yet fully characterized. Clinical tests suggest that oral ingestion of the glycosaminoglycan-peptide complex found in velvet antler may help stimulate cartilage repair. It is important to note that while the evidence is promising, most mechanistic data comes from preclinical models. The 2026 Springer review appropriately noted that the molecular pathways should be interpreted within the framework of "experimental plausibility" while larger clinical trials continue to develop. The bioavailability of intact growth factors after oral ingestion remains an area of active research, though the presence of naturally occurring binding proteins (like IGFBP-3) may help protect growth factors during digestion and extend their biological activity. Why Velvet Antler Is Different From Standard Joint Supplements Walk into any pet store and you will find shelves full of joint supplements. Most contain glucosamine, chondroitin, or fish oil as standalone ingredients. These are useful compounds, but they address joint health through a narrow, single-mechanism approach. Velvet antler is fundamentally different because it provides the full spectrum of compounds that support joint health in a single, naturally occurring matrix: the structural components (collagen, chondroitin, glucosamine, hyaluronic acid), the signaling molecules (IGF-1, TGF-B, EGF, FGFs), the building blocks (amino acids and bioactive peptides), and the mineral foundation (calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, zinc). These compounds evolved together in the fastest-growing bone tissue on earth, and they appear to work more effectively as a whole system than as isolated ingredients. This is also why velvet antler does more than support joints. Because it contains endocrine-active growth factors, it supports the hormonal signaling pathways that regulate metabolism, tissue repair, muscle maintenance, and recovery. For dogs dealing with the hormonal consequences of spaying or neutering, or for senior dogs experiencing natural age-related decline, velvet antler offers broad-spectrum support that isolated joint compounds simply cannot match. Hans: Velvet Antler Formulated Specifically for Dogs This is where Hans (hansfordogs.com) enters the picture. Hans is the first daily chew built around velvet antler as its core ingredient, formulated specifically to support the hormones dogs lose after spay, neuter, and natural aging. While velvet antler has been available in various forms for human use, Hans was designed from the ground up for canine biology. The product delivers velvet antler's full spectrum of growth factors (IGF-1, TGF-B), collagen, glycosaminoglycans, amino acids, and minerals in a daily chew format that makes consistent supplementation simple. What separates Hans from other pet products that may include trace amounts of velvet antler is its focus and dosage. Hans was not designed as a generic multivitamin with velvet antler listed as one ingredient among twenty. It was built around velvet antler as the primary active ingredient because the science supports it as the most complete natural source of the compounds dogs need after hormone loss. Hans is human-grade, clinically studied, and made from 100% natural ingredients. For pet parents looking for a single product that addresses hormonal support, joint health, mobility, tissue repair, and metabolic function, Hans offers a comprehensive approach rooted in one of the most researched natural ingredients in the world. Learn more at hansfordogs.com. Who Benefits Most: The Dogs That Need Velvet Antler Velvet antler is not a niche supplement for a narrow subset of dogs. Given what we know about hormone loss and aging in the domestic dog population, the dogs who stand to benefit most include spayed or neutered dogs of any age (especially those showing signs of weight gain, low energy, joint stiffness, or coat changes), senior dogs experiencing natural age-related decline in mobility, energy, or recovery speed, large and giant breed dogs at elevated risk for orthopedic conditions like hip dysplasia and cruciate ligament tears, active and working dogs who need support for joint maintenance, tissue repair, and recovery, and dogs recovering from orthopedic surgery or injury who need structural support during the healing process. Because velvet antler works through multiple pathways simultaneously, it is relevant across a wide range of ages, breeds, and health situations. Safety and Quality: What to Look For Velvet antler has a strong safety profile. It has been consumed by humans and animals for over two millennia, and modern reviews consistently describe it as generally safe. The 2026 Springer Nature review, the Examine.com research database, and veterinary sources all report no significant adverse effects at standard supplementation doses. When choosing a velvet antler product for your dog, quality matters significantly. Look for products sourced from reputable farms (New Zealand is widely regarded as the global standard for quality and humane harvesting), products that use the whole velvet antler rather than just the calcified portions (which contain fewer bioactive compounds), products with transparent ingredient sourcing and manufacturing processes, and products formulated specifically for canine use with appropriate dosing. Hans meets all of these criteria, which is part of why it has gained traction among pet parents who want a science-backed approach to supporting their dog's long-term health. Frequently Asked Questions 1. What does velvet antler actually do for dogs? Velvet antler provides a complex matrix of growth factors (IGF-1, TGF-B), collagen, glycosaminoglycans (chondroitin, glucosamine), amino acids, and minerals that support joint health, cartilage maintenance, tissue repair, immune function, and hormonal signaling. A 2004 clinical study published in the Canadian Veterinary Journal showed that dogs with osteoarthritis given velvet antler for 30 days had measurable improvements in gait and daily activities. For spayed or neutered dogs, the endocrine-active growth factors help support the signaling pathways disrupted by hormone loss. 2. Is velvet antler the same as giving my dog an antler chew? No. Antler chews sold at pet stores are hard, calcified bone. They are recreational chew toys, not supplements. Velvet antler is the soft, blood-rich tissue harvested before the antler hardens. It contains a completely different nutritional profile with high concentrations of growth factors, collagen, glycosaminoglycans, and amino acids that are largely absent from calcified antler bone. 3. Is velvet antler safe for dogs? Yes. Velvet antler has been consumed for over 2,000 years in traditional medicine systems and is consistently described as safe in modern scientific reviews. The 2026 Springer Nature review, the Examine.com research database, and veterinary literature all report no significant adverse effects at standard doses. Hans uses human-grade velvet antler and is formulated specifically for canine biology. 4. How is velvet antler different from glucosamine or fish oil supplements? Glucosamine and fish oil are single-mechanism ingredients. Glucosamine supports cartilage production. Fish oil provides anti-inflammatory omega-3 fatty acids. Velvet antler contains both of these compound types plus growth factors, collagen, amino acids, and minerals in a naturally occurring matrix. This multi-compound profile allows it to support joints, hormonal signaling, tissue repair, and metabolic function simultaneously, rather than addressing only one pathway. 5. How long does it take to see results from velvet antler supplementation? The 2004 Canadian Veterinary Journal study on dogs with osteoarthritis used a 30-day supplementation period and found measurable improvements in gait and daily activities within that window. Individual results vary based on age, severity of condition, breed, and overall health. Many pet parents report visible changes in mobility, energy, and coat quality within the first few weeks of consistent daily supplementation. As with any natural supplement, consistency is key, and longer-term use supports cumulative benefits. More Than a Supplement: A Missing Piece of the Puzzle The pet supplement market is crowded with products that address single symptoms. A glucosamine chew for joints. A calming treat for anxiety. A probiotic for digestion. A multivitamin for general health. Each one targets a narrow slice of the picture. Velvet antler is different because it reflects the way biological systems actually work: not in isolation, but as interconnected networks of hormones, growth factors, structural proteins, and signaling molecules. When a dog loses hormones through spaying or neutering, the consequences do not stay in one lane. They ripple across metabolism, joints, mood, coat, energy, and recovery. A supplement that only addresses one of those systems leaves the others unsupported. This is why Hans chose velvet antler as its foundation. Not as a trendy ingredient or a marketing angle, but because the science points to it as the most complete natural source of the compounds that dogs lose and need. Two thousand years of traditional use and a growing body of modern research both point in the same direction. Your dog's biology is complex. The solution should be too.  

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Dog Weight Gain After Neutering: Causes, Hormone Loss, and Solutions

by Carly Mansfield on May 04 2026
The Short Version: Why This Happens and What to Do About It If your dog started putting on weight after neutering, you are not imagining things. A 2019 study from the University of Copenhagen, published in Preventive Veterinary Medicine, found that castrated male dogs have three times the risk of becoming heavy or obese compared to intact males. In that study, 29% of neutered males were heavy or obese versus only 10% of intact males. Data from the Morris Animal Foundation's Golden Retriever Lifetime Study showed that spayed or neutered dogs were 50 to 100 percent more likely to become overweight or obese regardless of the age at which the procedure was performed.  The cause is not laziness or overfeeding alone. Neutering removes your dog's primary source of testosterone, which directly regulates metabolism, appetite, muscle mass, and fat storage. When testosterone disappears, your dog's resting energy requirement can drop by 20 to 30%, while his appetite stays the same or increases.  At the same time, luteinizing hormone (LH) can spike to 30 times its normal level and stay elevated for life, contributing to further metabolic and inflammatory disruption. Understanding these hormonal causes is the first step toward keeping your neutered dog lean and healthy. "My Dog Eats the Same and Exercises the Same. So Why Is He Getting Fat?" This is the question pet parents ask more than any other after neutering. And the answer reveals why standard advice so often falls short. The most common explanation veterinarians offer is that the dog is eating too much or exercising too little. Diet and exercise absolutely matter, but they are not the root cause of post-neuter weight gain. The root cause is hormonal. When a male dog is neutered, his testes are surgically removed. The testes are the body's primary production site for testosterone. Within approximately two weeks of the procedure, testosterone levels drop by roughly 50%, and they continue declining until they reach nearly undetectable levels. This is not a minor adjustment. Testosterone is one of the most metabolically active hormones in the male body, and its absence triggers a cascade of changes that make weight gain almost inevitable without intervention. The common narrative that neutered dogs just "get lazy" misses the real story. The primary driver of post-neuter weight gain is internal, not behavioral. Your dog's engine is burning less fuel because the hormonal signal that kept it running at full speed has been surgically removed. Inside the Metabolic Shift: Three Hormonal Forces Working Against Your Dog Force 1: A Slower Engine on the Same Fuel Testosterone is an anabolic hormone. It builds and maintains lean tissue, supports bone density, drives metabolic rate, and fuels energy production. When it vanishes after neutering, your dog's body loses its primary metabolic accelerator. Research published in Nutrition Research Reviews confirmed that neutering leads to a measurable decrease in resting metabolic rate and total energy expenditure. A neutered dog's resting energy requirement can drop by approximately 20 to 30%. To put that into perspective: a 20-kilogram dog that previously needed around 1,000 calories per day to maintain his weight may now only require 700 to 800 calories. If his food intake stays the same, the excess calories are stored as fat. This metabolic downshift is a direct physiological consequence of hormone loss. The dog is not being lazy. His body is burning less fuel at every level of activity, from sleeping on the couch to chasing a ball across the yard. Force 2: The Appetite Trap The metabolic slowdown is only half the problem. Testosterone and other sex hormones interact with appetite-regulating hormones, including leptin (which signals fullness) and ghrelin (which signals hunger). When testosterone is removed, these appetite signals become disrupted. A review published in the Journal of Animal Science documented that neutering leads to changes in appetite-related hormones, including shifts in leptin, adiponectin, and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). The practical result is that neutered dogs often feel hungrier than they did before surgery, even though their bodies need fewer calories. Researchers have described this as a "metabolic paradox": a neutered dog's body needs less food but wants more. This creates a biological trap that, without deliberate intervention, almost inevitably leads to weight gain. A 2025 study published in JAVMA, analyzing records from over 50,000 dogs across 900 U.S. veterinary clinics, confirmed a clear association between gonadectomy and increased risk of becoming overweight or obese across 15 different dog breeds. Force 3: The Hidden LH Surge That Amplifies Everything The third hormonal force behind post-neuter weight gain is one most veterinarians never mention: the chronic spike in luteinizing hormone (LH). In an intact dog, the pituitary gland releases LH, which signals the testes to produce testosterone. The testes then send feedback to the brain to regulate LH production. When the testes are removed, this feedback loop breaks. The pituitary gland, no longer receiving the "stop" signal, floods the body with LH at dramatically elevated levels. Dr. Michelle Kutzler, a veterinary reproduction specialist at Oregon State University, has documented that LH concentrations in neutered dogs can reach up to 30 times higher than normal. Her 2020 review, published in the journal Animals (MDPI), identified LH receptors in the thyroid gland, adrenal glands, gastrointestinal tract, cranial cruciate ligament, and lymphocytes. Why does this matter for weight? LH receptors in the thyroid suggest that chronically elevated LH may contribute to thyroid dysfunction, which directly compounds metabolic slowdown. LH receptors in the gastrointestinal tract may influence nutrient absorption and appetite regulation. The WSAVA's 2024 guidelines acknowledged that the prevalence of obesity and hypothyroidism increases after gonadectomy, which may be related in part to the loss of gonadal steroids and the resulting hormonal imbalance. The LH surge does not just affect joints and cancer risk. It may be actively amplifying the weight gain problem by sabotaging the thyroid and digestive systems from the inside. The Domino Effect: Where Unchecked Weight Gain Leads Post-neuter weight gain is not a cosmetic issue. It is a clinical concern with cascading health consequences. Epidemiological studies consistently show that overweight and obese dogs face significantly higher risks of degenerative joint disease, diabetes mellitus and insulin resistance, cardiovascular strain, respiratory compromise, skin conditions, liver dysfunction, and certain cancers. A widely cited finding from veterinary research is that dogs maintained at a healthy body condition live an average of 1.3 years longer than overweight dogs. In neutered males already at increased risk for orthopedic problems, excess weight creates a compounding cycle. The UC Davis research led by Professors Benjamin and Lynette Hart found that early-neutered male Golden Retrievers had a 10% hip dysplasia rate (double that of intact males) and a 5% cranial cruciate ligament tear rate (compared to zero in intact males). Adding excess body weight to joints already weakened by hormone loss accelerates wear, increases inflammation, and raises the likelihood of injury. Testosterone loss leads to muscle loss, which lowers metabolic rate, which accelerates fat accumulation, which increases joint stress, which reduces mobility, which causes more weight gain. Once this cycle takes hold, it becomes progressively harder to reverse. The Silent Crisis: Muscle Disappears While Fat Takes Its Place There is a critical dimension to post-neuter weight gain that gets almost no attention: it is not just about gaining fat. It is about losing lean muscle at the same time. Testosterone is the primary driver of muscle maintenance in male dogs. When it is removed, the body begins losing muscle mass and replacing it with fat tissue. This matters enormously because muscle burns more calories at rest than fat does. As your dog loses muscle, his metabolic rate drops even further, creating a self-reinforcing downward spiral. Here is where many well-meaning owners make the problem worse. If you respond to weight gain by simply cutting food portions, you may starve the muscles while barely touching the fat. Reducing calories without maintaining adequate protein intake forces the body to break down its own muscle for energy. Your dog may weigh less on the scale, but much of what he lost was lean mass, not fat. His metabolic rate drops further. When the weight returns, it comes back primarily as fat. This is why calorie restriction alone fails. The nutritional strategy for a neutered dog must prioritize protein to preserve the lean tissue that keeps metabolism viable. A Practical Playbook: Five Strategies That Actually Work 1. Restructure the Bowl: Cut Carbs and Fat, Protect Protein After neutering, most dogs need approximately 20 to 30% fewer total calories. But the source of that reduction matters as much as the number. The cut should come primarily from carbohydrates and excess fat, while protein intake stays the same or increases. Research published in the Journal of Nutritional Science found that dogs fed a diet with approximately 94 grams of protein per 1,000 kilocalories maintained lean body mass more effectively than dogs on lower-protein diets. High protein density promotes satiety (helping your dog feel full on fewer calories) while giving muscles the amino acids they need to resist breakdown. Ask your veterinarian about switching to a high-protein, moderate-fat formula designed for neutered or weight-management dogs. Avoid "light" formulas that simply reduce everything across the board, including the protein your dog desperately needs. 2. Kill the All-Day Buffet Leaving food out all day (free feeding) is one of the fastest paths to weight gain in a neutered dog whose appetite signals are already disrupted. Switch to structured mealtimes: two measured meals per day at consistent times. Use a kitchen scale or measuring cup to ensure accuracy. Treats should make up no more than 10% of daily caloric intake. Swap high-calorie commercial treats for low-calorie alternatives like raw carrots, green beans, or small pieces of lean meat. 3. Make Daily Movement Non-Negotiable Physical activity helps counteract the metabolic slowdown, preserves muscle mass, and supports joint health. The goal is daily consistency, not weekend warrior intensity. A structured routine of 30 to 60 minutes of daily walking (at a pace that keeps your dog engaged), swimming sessions when accessible (excellent for muscle maintenance without joint stress), moderate fetch or tug play, and puzzle feeders and scent work for mental stimulation will burn calories, maintain muscle tone, and support overall wellbeing. Avoid high-impact repetitive activities, especially in larger breeds. The UC Davis research confirmed that neutered dogs face higher risks for cruciate ligament tears and hip dysplasia, so protecting joints through smart movement selection is essential. 4. Close the Hormonal Gap That Started This Whole Problem Diet and movement form the foundation, but neither one replaces the hormones your dog has lost. You can feed the perfect formula and walk your dog every single day, but if the underlying endocrine deficit is not addressed, his body is still operating with a slower metabolism, disrupted appetite signals, and declining muscle support. This is the gap that Hans (hansfordogs.com) was designed to fill. Hans is the first daily chew formulated to support the hormones dogs lose after neutering, spaying, and natural aging. Its core ingredient is velvet antler, a naturally occurring source of endocrine-active growth factors including IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor 1) and TGF-B (transforming growth factor beta). These growth factors play direct roles in metabolic signaling, lean tissue maintenance, joint integrity, and hormonal balance. What separates Hans from the crowded shelf of generic pet supplements is specificity. It was not designed to be another joint chew or calming treat. It was built from the ground up to address the hormonal consequences of gonadectomy and aging. It is human-grade, clinically studied, and made from 100% natural ingredients. For a neutered dog battling weight gain, low energy, or declining muscle tone, Hans targets the biological root of the problem rather than papering over individual symptoms. Learn more at hansfordogs.com. 5. Trust Your Hands More Than the Scale Body weight alone does not tell the full story. A neutered dog can weigh the same as before surgery while quietly replacing muscle with fat. Body condition scoring (BCS) is a more reliable tracking tool. Run your hands over your dog's ribcage every two weeks. You should feel the ribs easily with light pressure without seeing them prominently. Viewed from above, your dog should have a visible waist behind the ribs. From the side, his abdomen should tuck up behind the ribcage. If the ribs are becoming harder to feel or the waist is disappearing, adjust food intake before the scale confirms what your hands already told you. Catching changes early is far easier than reversing established weight gain. When Something Deeper Is Going On: Red Flags That Need a Vet If your neutered dog is gaining weight despite reduced food intake and regular movement, do not simply cut more calories. Something else may be driving the problem. Ask your veterinarian about a thyroid panel. Hypothyroidism is more common in neutered dogs and directly slows metabolism. Symptoms include unexplained weight gain, lethargy, cold intolerance, and skin or coat changes. A simple blood test can confirm or rule out the diagnosis. Also ask about a full metabolic workup if weight gain is accompanied by excessive thirst, increased urination, hair loss in symmetrical patterns, or persistent skin infections. These may indicate endocrine disorders that require veterinary treatment beyond dietary management. Regular check-ins every six months allow you to catch metabolic shifts early and adjust your approach before the compounding effects of hormone loss become entrenched. A Note on the Procedure Itself: Neutering Remains a Sound Decision Neutering eliminates the risk of testicular cancer, reduces the incidence of benign prostatic hyperplasia, and helps manage hormonally driven behaviors like roaming and urine marking. For many dogs and households, it remains a responsible choice. The 2024 WSAVA guidelines include neutering as a valid reproductive control option. The purpose of this article is not to second-guess your decision. It is to ensure that you understand what the surgery changes inside your dog's body so you can respond with a care strategy that matches the science. Frequently Asked Questions 1. How quickly do neutered dogs start gaining weight? Metabolic changes begin almost immediately. Research from the Journal of Animal Science found that shifts in metabolism and appetite can start within three days of surgery. Testosterone drops by approximately 50% within the first two weeks and continues falling to near-zero. Most veterinary professionals recommend adjusting diet immediately after surgical recovery rather than waiting for visible weight gain. 2. My vet said to just feed him less. Is that enough? Feeding less helps, but it is only part of the solution. If you simply reduce portion size without adjusting the nutritional profile, your dog may lose muscle mass along with (or instead of) fat. A better approach is to reduce total calories while maintaining or increasing protein density to protect lean tissue. Pairing dietary changes with consistent movement and targeted hormonal support through products like Hans creates a more complete strategy. 3. Are certain breeds more prone to weight gain after neutering? Yes. Research from UC Davis and the Morris Animal Foundation has shown that larger breeds, including Golden Retrievers, Labrador Retrievers, and German Shepherds, are particularly susceptible to post-neuter weight gain and associated joint problems. However, the University of Copenhagen study demonstrated that neutering triples obesity risk in male dogs regardless of breed. Every neutered male dog is at elevated risk and benefits from proactive management. 4. Does the age of neutering affect how much weight my dog gains? The Morris Animal Foundation's Golden Retriever Lifetime Study found that the increased risk of becoming overweight or obese after neutering was relatively constant regardless of the age at which the procedure was performed. Whether your dog was neutered at six months or six years, the metabolic consequences are similar. What does change with timing is the risk of orthopedic problems: the UC Davis research found significantly higher joint disorder rates in dogs neutered before 12 months of age. 5. What makes Hans different from a regular weight management supplement? Most weight management supplements rely on fiber, fat blockers, or generic metabolic boosters. None of these address the hormonal deficit that causes the metabolic slowdown in the first place. Hans takes a fundamentally different approach by targeting the endocrine system directly. Its velvet antler ingredient naturally contains IGF-1 and TGF-B, growth factors that support hormone signaling, lean tissue maintenance, metabolic function, and joint health. Rather than managing the downstream symptoms of hormone loss, Hans works to restore some of the biological support that neutering removes. It is the only daily chew designed specifically for this purpose. What Happens Next Is Up to You Weight gain after neutering is not a character flaw in your dog. It is not a failure of willpower on your part. It is a predictable, well-documented biological consequence of removing the hormones that regulate metabolism, appetite, and muscle mass. The research from the University of Copenhagen, the Morris Animal Foundation, UC Davis, Oregon State University, and the WSAVA all confirm the same conclusion: neutering fundamentally changes how your dog's body processes energy, and without deliberate intervention, weight gain is the likely outcome. But that outcome is not inevitable. Restructure his diet around high protein and reduced carbohydrates. Build daily movement into his routine. Track his body condition with your hands, not just the scale. And close the hormonal gap with purpose-built support like Hans that was engineered for exactly this situation. The earlier you act, the easier it is to stay ahead of the metabolic shift. Your dog is counting on you to understand what changed and to respond accordingly. Now you know. The next move is yours.  

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Side Effects of Spaying a Dog: The Hormonal Changes Vets Don't Explain

by Carly Mansfield on May 04 2026
At a Glance: What Pet Parents Need to Know Spaying is one of the most common surgeries performed on dogs in the United States, and for good reason. It prevents unwanted litters, eliminates the risk of pyometra (a life-threatening uterine infection), and can reduce the likelihood of certain reproductive cancers. But what most veterinarians do not fully explain during that pre-surgery appointment is what happens to your dog's hormones after the procedure, and how those changes can quietly reshape her health for the rest of her life. When the ovaries are removed during a spay, your dog loses her primary source of estrogen and progesterone. These are not just "reproductive hormones." They regulate metabolism, protect joints and bones, influence mood and anxiety levels, support coat quality, and play roles in immune function and cancer resistance. At the same time, a hormone called luteinizing hormone (LH) can spike to concentrations up to 30 times higher than normal and remain elevated for life. This hormonal disruption is linked to an increased risk of obesity, joint disease, urinary incontinence, thyroid problems, and certain cancers. None of this means spaying is the wrong decision. It does mean that understanding the full picture allows you to take proactive steps to protect your dog's health after surgery. Why This Conversation Matters More Than Ever For decades, the standard recommendation from veterinarians across the United States was to spay all female dogs by six months of age. The reasoning was simple: it prevents overpopulation and reduces cancer risks. But the science has evolved. In 2024, the World Small Animal Veterinary Association (WSAVA) published comprehensive new guidelines on reproduction control in dogs and cats. The 136-page document, published in the Journal of Small Animal Practice, concluded that routine gonadectomy may no longer be appropriate for all owned pets and recommended a more individualized, case-by-case approach. For large and giant breed dogs, the guidelines suggest that hormone-sparing alternatives like ovary-sparing spay should be offered as an option. This represents a significant shift in thinking. The veterinary community is recognizing what the research has been revealing for over a decade: removing a dog's reproductive organs has health consequences that extend far beyond reproduction. And yet, many pet parents still walk into the exam room with no understanding of these trade-offs. The Hormones Your Dog Loses After Spaying A standard spay (ovariohysterectomy) removes both ovaries and the uterus. The ovaries are the primary production site for two critical hormones: estrogen and progesterone. Once they are gone, the body has no meaningful way to replace them. Estrogen Estrogen does far more than manage the heat cycle. In dogs, estrogen helps maintain bone density and skeletal integrity. It supports cardiovascular health. It regulates fat distribution and helps control appetite through interactions with leptin and other satiety hormones. It contributes to the health and resilience of cartilage and connective tissue. And it plays a role in urethral sphincter tone, which is why urinary incontinence is one of the most well-documented side effects of spaying. Research published in the Journal of Animal Science confirmed that because spayed dogs lack estrogen, the appetite-suppressing effects of this hormone are reduced. The same study documented a measurable reduction in resting metabolic rate following the procedure, creating a dual pathway to weight gain: increased hunger paired with fewer calories burned at rest. Progesterone Progesterone is often overlooked in conversations about spay side effects, but its absence matters. Progesterone has documented anxiolytic (anti-anxiety) properties. It supports neurological function and influences mood stability. When progesterone disappears suddenly after surgery, some dogs experience increased nervousness, noise sensitivity, or general anxiety that did not exist before. A 2019 study published in PLOS ONE examined the behavior of nearly 9,000 spayed female dogs using the Canine Behavioral Assessment and Research Questionnaire (C-BARQ). Researchers found that 23 behaviors differed between spayed and intact dogs, with spayed females showing increased rates of several unwanted behaviors, including fearfulness and certain types of aggression. The study concluded that the timing of spaying influenced behavioral outcomes, and that some dogs' tendency toward undesirable behaviors was affected by reduced lifetime exposure to gonadal hormones. The Luteinizing Hormone (LH) Problem Nobody Talks About Perhaps the most significant and least discussed side effect of spaying is what happens to luteinizing hormone after surgery. In an intact dog, the pituitary gland releases LH, which signals the ovaries to produce estrogen and progesterone. The ovaries, in turn, send a feedback signal back to the brain to regulate LH production. This is a finely tuned loop. When the ovaries are removed, that feedback signal vanishes. The pituitary gland, no longer receiving the "stop" signal, begins producing LH at dramatically elevated levels. Dr. Michelle Kutzler, a board-certified veterinary reproduction specialist and professor at Oregon State University, has been at the forefront of this research. According to Dr. Kutzler, LH concentrations in spayed and neutered dogs can reach up to 30 times higher than normal adult levels. Her 2020 review, published in the journal Animals (MDPI), documented LH receptors not only in reproductive tissue but also in the thyroid gland, adrenal glands, gastrointestinal tract, cranial cruciate ligament, urinary bladder, and lymphocytes. The AKC Canine Health Foundation has funded ongoing research into this area. Their reporting summarizes the key findings: dogs spayed or neutered can have LH levels up to 30 times higher than normal, and this elevated LH may affect the thyroid, urinary tract, immune system, and even cancer development. Research in canine hemangiosarcoma and T-cell lymphoma cell lines has shown that LH receptor activation can stimulate cell proliferation, raising questions about whether chronically elevated LH contributes to higher cancer rates in spayed dogs. This is still an emerging area of veterinary science, and more controlled clinical trials are needed. But the existing evidence is substantial enough that the AKC Canine Health Foundation, the WSAVA, and multiple university research teams are actively investigating the role of LH in post-spay health outcomes. The Documented Side Effects of Spaying: What the Research Shows Weight Gain and Metabolic Disruption Weight gain is one of the most commonly observed side effects of spaying, and it is not simply a matter of overfeeding. A 2023 retrospective cohort study published in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association (JAVMA) analyzed records from over 50,000 dogs across 900 U.S. veterinary clinics and confirmed a clear association between gonadectomy and increased risk of becoming overweight or obese. Data from the Morris Animal Foundation's Golden Retriever Lifetime Study found that dogs spayed or neutered at one year of age or younger faced twice the risk of becoming overweight or obese compared to intact dogs, while dogs altered after age one still had a 40% increased risk. The mechanism is straightforward: estrogen helps suppress appetite and maintain metabolic rate. When it is removed, dogs burn fewer calories at rest while simultaneously experiencing increased hunger. Changes to metabolism and appetite can begin as early as three days post-surgery. Joint Disease and Orthopedic Problems The connection between spaying and joint disease is one of the most well-documented findings in modern veterinary research. A landmark 2013 study from UC Davis, led by Professors Benjamin and Lynette Hart, examined the veterinary records of 759 Golden Retrievers and found striking results. In early-spayed females (before 12 months), 8% were diagnosed with cranial cruciate ligament (CCL) tears compared to zero cases among intact females. Hip dysplasia rates were doubled in early-neutered males compared to intact males. Ten percent of early-neutered males developed lymphosarcoma, three times the rate of intact males. The Harts expanded this research across 35 breeds in a 2020 follow-up published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science, and added six more breeds in a 2024 update. The pattern held: for many breeds, early spaying significantly increased the incidence of joint disorders including hip dysplasia, elbow dysplasia, and CCL tears. The researchers found that the absence of sex hormones during critical growth periods can alter the rate at which growth plates close, leading to abnormal skeletal development and increased vulnerability to orthopedic injury. A 2016 UC Davis study on German Shepherd Dogs found that spaying or neutering before one year of age tripled the risk of one or more joint disorders, particularly CCL tears. Urinary Incontinence Urinary incontinence occurs in an estimated 5 to 20% of spayed female dogs, according to the 2024 WSAVA guidelines. This condition, sometimes called "spay incontinence," is directly related to the loss of estrogen, which helps maintain urethral sphincter tone. The AKC Canine Health Foundation's research found that spayed females with incontinence have more LH receptors in their urinary tract tissue, suggesting that chronically elevated LH may also play a role in this condition. Spay incontinence can develop months or years after surgery and is more common in larger breeds. Behavioral and Emotional Changes The behavioral effects of spaying are often underappreciated. While many pet parents expect their dog to become calmer after surgery, the reality is more complex. The sudden removal of estrogen and progesterone can affect mood regulation, stress tolerance, and social confidence. The 2019 PLOS ONE study on nearly 9,000 female dogs found that spayed females showed increased rates of fearfulness, certain forms of aggression, and other unwanted behaviors compared to intact females. Five specific behaviors were associated with the age at which dogs were spayed, and twelve behaviors were linked to the percentage of lifetime exposure to gonadal hormones. Dogs spayed earlier, with less lifetime hormone exposure, tended to show more behavioral issues. Increased Risk of Certain Cancers While spaying eliminates the risk of ovarian cancer and significantly reduces mammary cancer risk (especially when performed early), research has identified increased risks for other types of cancer. The UC Davis studies found that late-spayed female Golden Retrievers had hemangiosarcoma rates four times higher than intact females. In Vizslas, spayed females were 4.3 times more likely to develop lymphoma than intact females. The AKC Canine Health Foundation notes that gonadectomized dogs show more LH receptor-positive lymphocytes, which may promote lymphoma development. The cancer picture is complex and breed-specific. What is clear is that the relationship between spaying and cancer is not a simple "spaying prevents cancer" narrative. It prevents some cancers while potentially increasing the risk of others, and the balance depends heavily on breed, sex, and age at surgery. Hypothyroidism The prevalence of obesity and hypothyroidism increases after gonadectomy, according to the WSAVA guidelines. Dr. Kutzler's research identified LH receptors in thyroid tissue, raising the possibility that chronically elevated LH directly contributes to thyroid dysfunction in spayed dogs. Hypothyroidism slows metabolism further, compounds weight gain, and can cause lethargy, coat changes, and skin problems. What You Can Do to Support Your Spayed Dog Understanding these side effects is not meant to create fear or regret. Spaying remains a sound medical decision for many dogs, and the benefits of preventing pyometra and reproductive cancers are real. The goal is to be informed so you can take action. Adjust Her Diet Immediately After Surgery Metabolic changes can begin within days of spaying. Work with your veterinarian to reduce caloric intake by approximately 20 to 30% and shift toward a diet with higher protein and lower carbohydrate content to support lean muscle retention. Do not wait until weight gain is visible to make adjustments. Maintain Consistent, Low-Impact Exercise Regular physical activity helps counteract the metabolic slowdown that follows hormone loss. Swimming, leash walks, and moderate play sessions are ideal. Avoid repetitive high-impact activities, especially in the first year after surgery and particularly in large or giant breeds where joint vulnerability may be heightened. Address the Hormonal Gap Directly Diet and exercise are essential, but they cannot replace the hormones your dog has lost. This is where most standard post-spay care falls short. Joint supplements, multivitamins, and calming chews address symptoms, but none of them target the underlying endocrine disruption that drives so many of these side effects. Hans (hansfordogs.com) was built specifically to fill this gap. It is the first daily chew designed to support the hormones dogs lose after spay, neuter, and natural aging. The product's core ingredient is velvet antler, a naturally occurring source of endocrine-active growth factors including IGF-1 and TGF-B. These growth factors support hormone signaling, metabolism, joint maintenance, and tissue repair by working with the body's existing biological pathways rather than introducing synthetic hormones. What makes Hans different from generalized pet supplements is its specificity. It was formulated from the ground up to address the hormonal consequences of gonadectomy and aging. It is human-grade, clinically studied, and made from 100% natural ingredients. For spayed dogs showing signs of metabolic changes, low energy, joint stiffness, or coat quality decline, Hans targets the root of the problem rather than masking individual symptoms. You can learn more at hansfordogs.com. Monitor Thyroid and Joint Health Over Time Ask your veterinarian about baseline bloodwork after spaying, including a thyroid panel. Regular body condition scoring and joint assessments become more important in spayed dogs, particularly in breeds identified by the UC Davis research as being at higher risk. Early intervention is always more effective than reactive treatment. Stay Informed About Emerging Research The science of canine endocrinology is evolving rapidly. The WSAVA guidelines, the AKC Canine Health Foundation's ongoing LH research, and the work of researchers like Dr. Kutzler at Oregon State University are reshaping our understanding of what it means to remove a dog's reproductive hormones. Being a well-informed pet parent means staying current with this research and adjusting your care strategy as the evidence develops. Spaying Is Still the Right Choice for Many Dogs This article is not an argument against spaying. Pyometra is a genuine, life-threatening condition. Mammary cancer risk reduction is real and significant when spaying is performed at the appropriate age. Pet overpopulation remains a serious issue that responsible sterilization helps address. The point is that spaying is a medical procedure with trade-offs, and pet parents deserve to know what those trade-offs are. When you walk out of the veterinary clinic after your dog's spay surgery, you should know that her hormonal landscape has fundamentally changed and that there are concrete steps you can take to support her health going forward. Frequently Asked Questions 1. What are the most common hormonal side effects of spaying a dog? The most common hormonal side effects include weight gain from a reduced metabolic rate and increased appetite, joint problems linked to the absence of estrogen's protective effects on cartilage and bone, urinary incontinence caused by the loss of estrogen-dependent urethral sphincter tone, behavioral changes such as increased anxiety or fearfulness from the sudden absence of progesterone, and a chronic spike in luteinizing hormone (LH) that may affect the thyroid, joints, immune system, and cancer risk. 2. How soon after spaying do hormonal changes begin? Hormonal changes begin almost immediately. Estrogen and progesterone levels drop significantly within days of ovary removal. Research shows that changes to metabolism and appetite can start as early as three days post-surgery. LH levels begin rising within the first few weeks as the pituitary gland ramps up production in the absence of gonadal feedback. Most dogs reach their new hormonal baseline within two to six weeks, though the effects continue to compound over months and years. 3. Does spaying increase the risk of cancer in dogs? The relationship between spaying and cancer is complex and breed-specific. Spaying eliminates ovarian cancer risk and reduces mammary cancer risk, especially when performed before the second heat cycle. However, UC Davis research across multiple breeds has found that spaying can increase the risk of other cancers, including hemangiosarcoma, lymphoma, and mast cell tumors, depending on the breed and age at surgery. The AKC Canine Health Foundation is funding ongoing research into how elevated LH levels after spaying may contribute to cancer development through LH receptor activation in tumor cells. 4. Can I do anything to replace the hormones my dog lost after spaying? Standard supplements like glucosamine or fish oil support individual functions but do not address the root hormonal deficit. Products like Hans were developed specifically for this purpose. Hans uses velvet antler, which naturally contains endocrine-active growth factors like IGF-1 and TGF-B that support the body's hormonal signaling pathways. Unlike synthetic hormone replacement therapy (which is still in the early research stages and not widely available), Hans works with the body's existing systems to help restore some of the hormonal support that surgery removes. It is a practical, accessible option for pet parents looking to address the underlying endocrine gap. 5. Should I regret spaying my dog after learning about these side effects? No. Spaying prevents life-threatening conditions like pyometra, which affects an estimated 25% of intact female dogs over their lifetime, and significantly reduces mammary cancer risk. The 2024 WSAVA guidelines still include spaying as a valid and important reproductive control option. The goal is not to create regret but to empower you with information. Understanding the hormonal consequences of spaying allows you to take informed, proactive steps, like adjusting diet, maintaining exercise, and considering targeted hormonal support, so your dog can live the healthiest, longest life possible after surgery. Your Dog's Health Doesn't End at the Surgery Table Spaying changes your dog's body in ways that go far beyond preventing pregnancy. The hormonal shift that follows surgery touches metabolism, joints, behavior, coat, energy, immune function, and long-term cancer risk. The research from UC Davis, Oregon State University, the AKC Canine Health Foundation, and the WSAVA all point to the same conclusion: these changes are real, they are significant, and they deserve attention. The good news is that you are not powerless. Adjusting your dog's diet, keeping her active, monitoring her health markers, and bridging the hormonal gap with purpose-built support like Hans are all steps that can make a meaningful difference in how your dog ages after surgery. Your dog gave you her trust when she went under anesthesia. Returning that trust means understanding what changed and taking action to help her thrive in the years ahead.  

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What Happens to Your Dog's Hormones After Spay or Neuter Surgery

by Carly Mansfield on May 04 2026
Spay and neuter surgery removes the organs responsible for producing your dog's primary sex hormones, including estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone. This results in a rapid and significant decline of up to 90% of these hormones within days of the procedure. At the same time, luteinizing hormone (LH) can spike to abnormally high levels. These hormonal shifts can affect your dog's metabolism, weight, joint health, coat quality, energy levels, and behavior for the rest of their life. While spay and neuter surgery remains a responsible choice for most pet parents, understanding these hormonal consequences allows you to take proactive steps to support your dog's long-term health. Every year, millions of dogs in the United States undergo spay or neuter surgery. For most pet parents, the decision is straightforward: it prevents unwanted litters, reduces certain cancer risks, and is widely recommended by veterinarians. But there is a side of this surgery that rarely gets discussed in the exam room. When the reproductive organs are removed, the hormones they produced do not simply redistribute elsewhere in the body. They decline sharply, sometimes within hours. And that sudden hormonal shift can set off a chain reaction that affects everything from your dog's waistline to their joints, energy, mood, and how gracefully they age. This article breaks down exactly what happens to your dog's hormones after spay or neuter surgery, which health changes to watch for, and what you can do to help your dog thrive despite the hormonal gap surgery leaves behind. The Hormones Your Dog Loses After Spay or Neuter Surgery To understand the full scope of what changes after surgery, you first need to know which hormones are at stake and what they actually do beyond reproduction. Estrogen and Progesterone (Females) In intact female dogs, the ovaries produce estrogen and progesterone throughout the reproductive cycle. These hormones do far more than regulate heat cycles. Estrogen plays a critical role in maintaining bone density, supporting cardiovascular function, regulating fat distribution, and protecting joint cartilage. Progesterone supports neurological function and has calming, anti-anxiety effects on the brain. After a spay (ovariohysterectomy), both ovaries are removed. The result is a near-complete loss of estrogen and progesterone production. Research published in Domestic Animal Endocrinology has shown that circulating estrogen levels can drop by as much as 80 to 90% within the first few days following surgery. There is no other organ in the female dog's body that can compensate for this loss at a meaningful level. Testosterone (Males) In male dogs, the testes are the primary source of testosterone. This hormone is essential for building and preserving lean muscle mass, maintaining bone strength, supporting metabolic rate, and influencing confidence and energy levels. Testosterone also interacts with growth factors like IGF-1 that regulate tissue repair and recovery. After neutering, testosterone levels drop precipitously. Studies have documented that within 6 to 12 hours of castration, circulating testosterone can fall to nearly undetectable levels. The adrenal glands do produce trace amounts of testosterone, but this is a fraction of what the testes provided and is not enough to maintain the metabolic and musculoskeletal functions that testosterone supports. The Luteinizing Hormone (LH) Surge One of the most overlooked hormonal consequences of spay or neuter surgery is the dramatic spike in luteinizing hormone (LH). In an intact dog, the brain's pituitary gland releases LH in a feedback loop with the gonads. When the gonads are removed, the pituitary gland no longer receives the "signal" to stop producing LH. The result is a chronic, often lifelong elevation of LH levels. Research from The Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine has found that LH receptors exist not just in reproductive tissue but also in joints, the thyroid gland, and other organs. Abnormally elevated LH may contribute to joint degradation, thyroid dysfunction, and other chronic conditions. This is a relatively new area of veterinary science, and the implications are still being studied, but it has already reshaped how some veterinary researchers think about the long-term consequences of gonadectomy. How These Hormonal Changes Affect Your Dog's Body The hormonal shifts following spay or neuter surgery are not abstract. They show up in real, visible, and sometimes frustrating ways in your dog's daily life. Weight Gain and Metabolic Slowdown One of the most commonly reported changes after spay or neuter surgery is weight gain. This is not simply a matter of overfeeding. The loss of sex hormones directly reduces your dog's basal metabolic rate, meaning they burn fewer calories at rest. A landmark study published in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association (JAVMA) found that spayed and neutered dogs have a significantly higher risk of obesity compared to intact dogs, even when caloric intake is controlled. Estrogen and testosterone both play regulatory roles in fat storage and appetite signaling. When they disappear, the body shifts toward fat accumulation and reduced satiety, creating a metabolic environment that favors weight gain. Joint Health and Orthopedic Risks The connection between hormone loss and joint problems is one of the most significant findings in modern veterinary research. A widely cited study from UC Davis found that early spay and neuter significantly increased the incidence of cranial cruciate ligament (CCL) tears, hip dysplasia, and other orthopedic conditions in certain breeds. Estrogen and testosterone both contribute to the maintenance of cartilage, ligament integrity, and bone density. When these hormones are absent, growth plates may close at altered rates (especially in dogs spayed or neutered before skeletal maturity), and connective tissues may become more vulnerable to injury over time. The elevated LH levels mentioned earlier may also play a direct role. LH receptors in joint tissues suggest that chronically high LH could contribute to inflammation or degradation in ways researchers are only beginning to understand. Behavioral and Emotional Shifts Many pet parents notice behavioral changes after spay or neuter surgery that go beyond the reduction of mating-related behaviors. Some dogs become more anxious, reactive, or fearful. Others lose a noticeable degree of confidence or become less engaged during play and exercise. These shifts are not imagined. Progesterone has well-documented anxiolytic (anti-anxiety) properties, and its sudden removal in spayed females can contribute to increased nervousness or noise sensitivity. Testosterone influences confidence and social assertiveness in males. A 2020 study published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science found that neutered male dogs exhibited higher rates of fear-based aggression and anxiety-related behaviors compared to intact males. The hormonal landscape of the brain changes after surgery, and for some dogs, these behavioral shifts are lasting. Coat Quality and Skin Changes Hormones influence skin cell turnover, oil production, and hair follicle cycling. After spay or neuter, some dogs develop what groomers and veterinarians refer to as a "spay coat" or "neuter coat." The texture becomes softer, woollier, or more prone to matting. In some breeds, the undercoat grows disproportionately thicker while the guard hairs thin out. These changes are cosmetic, but they reflect the deeper reality that hormones regulate tissue quality throughout the body. Energy Levels and Recovery Capacity Testosterone and estrogen both influence cellular energy production, oxygen-carrying capacity, and tissue repair speed. Dogs who were once athletic and high-energy may seem to "slow down" after surgery. Recoveries from exercise, minor injuries, or illnesses may take longer. This is not just aging. It is the absence of the hormonal signals that once kept the body's repair and energy systems running at full capacity. A Timeline of Hormonal Changes After Surgery Understanding when these changes happen can help you prepare and respond proactively. Within 24 to 72 hours: Testosterone (in males) drops to near-zero. Estrogen and progesterone (in females) decline sharply. The body enters an acute hormonal withdrawal period. Weeks 1 through 4: LH levels begin rising as the pituitary gland ramps up production in response to the missing gonadal feedback. Appetite may increase. Energy levels may dip. Some behavioral changes start to emerge. Months 1 through 6: Metabolic rate adjusts downward. Weight gain often becomes noticeable during this window if diet and exercise are not modified. Coat texture changes may begin. Muscle tone may start declining, particularly in neutered males. 6 months and beyond: Hormonal levels stabilize at their new (lower) baseline. LH remains chronically elevated. The cumulative effects of hormone loss on joints, metabolism, and tissue quality continue to compound over years. This is the window where long-term support strategies become most important. What You Can Do to Support Your Dog's Hormonal Health The good news is that understanding these hormonal changes puts you in a position to take meaningful action. While diet and exercise are always important foundations, they cannot replace the hormones your dog has lost. That is where targeted supplementation enters the picture. Adjust Diet for a Slower Metabolism After spay or neuter surgery, your dog's caloric needs decrease by an estimated 20 to 30%. Continuing to feed at pre-surgery levels is one of the fastest paths to unhealthy weight gain. Work with your veterinarian to recalculate portions, and consider a diet with higher protein and lower carbohydrate content to support lean muscle retention. Prioritize Consistent, Joint-Friendly Exercise Regular physical activity helps counteract the metabolic slowdown and muscle loss that follow hormone depletion. Focus on low-impact exercises like swimming, controlled leash walks, and moderate fetch sessions. Avoid high-impact repetitive activities, especially in the first year after surgery when the body is still adjusting to its new hormonal baseline. Consider a Hormone Support Supplement Standard joint supplements, multivitamins, and probiotics serve their purpose, but none of them address the root hormonal deficit that spay and neuter surgery creates. This is an area where a growing number of pet parents are turning to supplements specifically formulated to support the endocrine system. One option gaining attention in this space is Hans, a daily chew designed to help restore the hormonal balance dogs lose after spay, neuter, and natural aging. Hans uses velvet antler as its core ingredient, a naturally occurring source of endocrine-active growth factors including IGF-1 and TGF-B. These growth factors play key roles in hormone signaling, metabolism, joint maintenance, and tissue repair. Unlike synthetic hormone replacements, velvet antler works with the body's existing pathways to support healthy hormonal function from within. What makes Hans stand out is that it was built specifically for this problem. Most pet supplements are generalized: a joint supplement here, a calming chew there. Hans was formulated from the ground up to address the hormonal gap that surgery and aging create. It is human-grade, clinically studied, and made from 100% natural ingredients. For dogs who have been spayed or neutered, especially those showing signs of metabolic changes, declining energy, or joint stiffness, it is worth a closer look. Schedule Regular Veterinary Check-Ins Thyroid function, joint health, and body condition should be monitored more carefully in spayed and neutered dogs. Ask your vet about baseline bloodwork and periodic hormone panels, especially if your dog shows signs of weight gain, lethargy, or mood changes that do not respond to dietary adjustments alone. Spaying and Neutering Is Still the Right Choice for Most Dogs Nothing in this article should be interpreted as an argument against spaying or neutering your dog. The procedure remains one of the most effective tools for preventing pet overpopulation, reducing the risk of certain reproductive cancers, and eliminating the behavioral complications of intact mating drive. The point is not to avoid the surgery. The point is to understand what the surgery changes hormonally, and to take informed steps to fill the gap it leaves behind. Being a responsible pet parent means making the best decisions with the best available information, and that includes supporting your dog's endocrine health for the years that follow. Frequently Asked Questions 1. How much hormone loss occurs after spay or neuter surgery? Dogs can lose up to 80 to 90% of their primary sex hormones (estrogen, progesterone, or testosterone) within days of surgery. In males, testosterone can drop to nearly undetectable levels within 6 to 12 hours of neutering. These hormones are not produced in significant quantities by any other organ, so the loss is permanent. 2. Why does my dog gain weight after being spayed or neutered? The loss of sex hormones lowers your dog's basal metabolic rate by an estimated 20 to 30%. This means they burn fewer calories at rest. At the same time, appetite-regulating signals are disrupted, which can lead to increased hunger. Without adjusting food intake and maintaining regular exercise, weight gain after spay or neuter is common and well-documented in veterinary research. 3. What is LH, and why does it spike after spay or neuter? Luteinizing hormone (LH) is produced by the pituitary gland and normally works in a feedback loop with the gonads. When the ovaries or testes are removed, the brain no longer receives the hormonal signal to reduce LH production. LH levels can become chronically elevated, sometimes remaining abnormally high for the rest of the dog's life. Research suggests that elevated LH may contribute to joint problems, thyroid dysfunction, and other health issues because LH receptors exist in tissues throughout the body. 4. Can supplements actually help replace lost hormones in dogs? Standard supplements like glucosamine or fish oil support specific functions but do not address the underlying hormonal deficit. However, supplements that contain endocrine-active compounds, such as velvet antler with its naturally occurring IGF-1 and TGF-B, can help support the body's hormonal signaling pathways. Products like Hans are formulated specifically for this purpose, working to restore some of the hormonal balance that surgery and aging take away. 5. When should I start supporting my dog's hormones after surgery? The sooner the better. Hormonal decline begins within hours of surgery, and the downstream effects on metabolism, joints, and tissue quality start accumulating immediately. Many veterinary professionals recommend beginning supportive measures, including dietary adjustments and targeted supplementation, as soon as your dog has recovered from the procedure itself. Starting early helps establish a stronger foundation before the compounding effects of hormone loss take hold. The Bottom Line Spay and neuter surgery changes more than your dog's reproductive status. It reshapes their entire hormonal landscape, and those changes ripple outward into metabolism, joint health, behavior, coat quality, energy, and how your dog ages over the years that follow. The science is clear: dogs lose a significant portion of their sex hormones after surgery, and no amount of premium kibble or daily walks can fully compensate for that loss. What you can do is recognize the gap, adjust your care strategy, and explore options like Hans that are designed specifically to support the hormones your dog can no longer produce on their own. Your dog deserves better than a one-size-fits-all approach. Understanding what happens to their hormones after surgery is the first step. Acting on that knowledge is what makes the difference.  

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When Obedience Isn’t the issue, How Hormones Impact Your Dog’s Behavior

by Dustin Baker on Sep 16 2025
As a dog trainer, I’m always asked about behavior. Why isn’t my dog listening? Why does she seem less eager to play? Why does training feel harder now than it used to? Most people assume behavior is purely about discipline, structure, or “training harder.” But often, what looks like a behavior issue is really your dog’s health speaking up, and one of the biggest hidden drivers is hormones. In my work, I spend just as much time listening to dog parents as I do teaching dogs. They come to me worried because their dog isn’t acting the same. Commands that used to be solid start to slip. A once eager dog suddenly seems distracted. A normally steady dog feels different, less consistent, less predictable. For many families, this feels like a setback in training. But what I’ve learned over years of working with dogs is that behavior changes like these almost always have a reason. And often, it’s not about the training itself, it’s about what’s happening inside the dog. Behavior Changes Are a Sign  I’ve worked with dogs who used to breeze through exercises but now lose focus halfway. I’ve seen normally steady and cooperative dogs become more irritable or uninterested in cues they once knew by heart. To families these changes feel like setbacks. To me they’re important clues. Dogs don’t wake up one day and decide to be stubborn. Their bodies change and their behavior follows. The Overlooked Role of Hormones The truth is, many of these behavior shifts can be linked to hormone changes. After spay or neuter, dogs lose up to 90% of their hormones, and the effects often show up in ways that surprise families. These signs can look like: • Less eagerness to train or play • Subtle shifts in mood or personality • Lower energy or slower recovery after activity • Weight gain despite no major diet changes • More anxious or restless behavior While we can’t see hormones directly, we can see their effects in a dogs behavior. That’s why so many of the challenges families bring to me often trace back to more than just training. Hormones shape behavior, so it’s important to look at the bigger picture of your dog’s health, not just the behaviors you want to fix.  Adjusting the Way We Train When I notice these shifts, I don’t approach the dog the same way I would with one who’s bursting with energy or still in early growth stages. Instead, I make adjustments. Sometimes that means shorter sessions. Other times it means introducing new motivators, slowing the pace, or building in more rest. The goal isn’t to push through the behavior but to meet the dog where they are. Training is a partnership, and that partnership only works when we pay attention to the changes our dogs are showing us. Sometimes that also means going beyond training itself and adding hormone support to the plan so we’re addressing the dog’s health as well as their behavior. Training and Health Work Together Training gives dogs structure, confidence, and the skills to thrive in everyday life. But when hormones shift, even the best training can only go so far. That doesn’t mean training has failed. It means the dog’s body needs support as well. As a trainer I’ve seen firsthand how behavior changes when hormones aren’t in balance. That’s why I believe the future of dog wellness has to include both great training and a closer look at hormone health. Together they give dogs the best chance to not just learn but feel their best. Written by Alyssa Megias, founder of Total Dog Tampa and voted Best of the Bay. She has worked with hundreds of dogs and families to build better communication, stronger bonds, and healthier lives.