Spaying your female pet will help
prevent both uterine infections and breast cancer.
Spaying helps
prevent uterine infections and breast cancer, which can be fatal.
The ASPCA says that spaying «helps
prevent uterine infections and breast cancer, which is fatal in about... 90 percent of cats.
Spaying female cats helps
prevent uterine infections and breast cancer, and prevents them from going into heat.
Spaying helps
prevent uterine infections and certain types of cancer, including ovarian and mammary (breast) cancer.
Not only does this help them with long term health (spaying helps
prevent uterine infections and breast tumors, and neutering helps prevent testicular cancer and prostate problems), it also helps control the pet population.
Spaying helps
prevent uterine infections and breast cancer, which leads to death in about half of dogs and almost all cats diagnosed with these conditions.
Spaying helps to
prevent uterine infections and breast tumors, and that's good as tumors are typically malignant or cancerous in about 50 % of dogs and 90 % of cats.
Apart from helping reduce the cases of homeless pets, spaying and neutering also bring health and behavioral benefits to your pets like helping
them prevent uterine infections and tumor.
Spaying helps
prevent uterine infections and breast cancer, which is fatal in about 50 percent of dogs and 90 percent of cats.
Spaying helps
prevent uterine infections and breast cancer, a condition which can occur in approximately 50 percent of un-spayed dogs and 90 percent of un-spayed cats.
Spaying and neutering
prevents uterine infections, mammary and testicular tumors, and some kinds of cancer.
Spaying females prior to their first heat cycle nearly eliminates the risk of breast cancer by preventing uterine tumors (which are malignant, or cancerous, in about 50 % of dogs and 90 % of cats), and spaying
prevents uterine infections and uterine cancer.
Benefits include
preventing uterine infection, preventing mammary cancer and other reproductive cancers, preventing or improving undesirable behaviors (such as aggression, territorial behaviors, urine marking), preventing prostate enlargement and difficulty urinating or defecating in older male dogs.
Even though at this usually late date it will not prevent more tumors from appearing, it will
prevent uterine infection (pyometra) and uterine cancer, and might even prevent hormone influence on existing tumors.
According to the American Veterinary Medical Association, spaying and neutering pets offers many health benefits to pets including
preventing uterine infections and breast cancer in female dogs and lessen the risk of enlarged prostate glands and testicular cancer in male dogs.
Spaying furthermore
prevents uterine infections, which are also often fatal.
Spaying helps
prevent uterine infection and breast cancer, which is fatal in about 50 percent of dogs and 90 percent of cats.
Spaying your pet prior to her first heat has proven to eliminate her risk of breast tumors, that are found to be malignant (cancerous) in about half the cases in dogs and 90 % of cats, as well as
preventing uterine infections.
Spaying females prior to their first heat cycle nearly eliminates the risk of breast cancer and totally
prevents uterine infections and uterine cancer.
Spaying
prevents uterine infections, ovarian cancers, and breast tumors in female cats, while neutering prevents testicular cancer and some prostate problems in males.
Provides Health Benefits: Spaying your pet nearly eliminates breast cancer and totally
prevents uterine infections and cancer.
If done prior to their first heat cycle nearly eliminates the risk of breast cancer and totally
prevents uterine infections and uterine cancer in females.
Not exact matches
It is a
uterine tonic, anti-abortive, and helps
prevent infection.
It is a
uterine tonic, anti-abortive, and helps
prevent infection.
Spaying and neutering rabbits also
prevents a variety of other concerns, such as breast cancer,
uterine infections, ovarian cysts and other behaviors like scratching, breeding and cage aggression.
Lasky strongly recommends the third option, which she said helps
prevent two potentially fatal health problems: mammary tumors and pyometra, a canine
uterine infection.
Spaying also
prevents pyometra which is a life - threatening
uterine infection and, most importantly, pregnancy and unwanted or poorly bred puppies.
These advantages include decreasing the chances of mammary (breast) tumors later in life, decreasing the chance of cystic ovaries and
uterine infections later in life, decreasing the desire to roam the neighborhood, decreasing the incidence of prostate disease later in life, helping
prevent spraying and marking, and also decreases the surplus of unwanted puppies and kittens.
These advantages include decreasing the chances of breast tumors later in life, decreasing the chance of cystic ovaries and
uterine infections later in life, decreasing the desire to roam the neighborhood, decreasing the incidence of prostate
infections later in life, helping
prevent spraying and marking, and also decreases the surplus of unwanted puppies and kittens.
If your cat reaches 5 + years without being spayed, they are also more prone to pyometra which is a life threatening
infection of the uterus, and ovarian and
uterine cancer, all of which can be 100 %
prevented with spaying.
Spaying a female dog
prevents uterine cancer and helps
prevent pyometra (a serious
infection of the uterus) and breast cancer; having this done before the first heat offers the best protection from these diseases.
Spaying females helps to
prevent mammary cancer, which is fatal in many cases, and
uterine infections, common in un-spayed females.
In addition, early spaying
prevents later problems, including mammary tumors,
uterine infections, and
uterine tumors.
The surgeries help
prevents fight wounds, messy canine vaginal discharges, and
uterine infections.
Females that are not used for breeding should be spayed by that time to
prevent disease conditions such as
uterine infections and breast tumors later in life.
Most importantly, early spaying
prevents two common diseases in intact females: mammary cancer and a deadly
uterine infection known as a pyometra.
Helps
prevent serious medical conditions, such as
uterine infections,
uterine / ovarian cancer and breast cancer.
These advantages include decreasing the chances of mammary tumors later in life, decreasing the chance of cystic ovaries and
uterine infections, decreasing the desire to roam the neighborhood, decreasing the incidence of prostate cancer later in life, helping
prevent spraying and marking, and also decreasing the surplus of unwanted puppies and kittens that end up in shelters.
These advantages include decreasing the chances of breast tumors later in life, decreasing the chance of cystic ovaries and
uterine infections later in life, decreasing the desire to roam the neighborhood, decreasing the incidence of prostate cancer later in life, helping
prevent spraying and marking, and also decreases the surplus of unwanted puppies and kittens.
It
prevents dogs from getting
uterine infections later in life.
Beyond
preventing unwanted litters of puppies, spaying has been proven to significantly reduce the chance of your dog getting breast cancer and
uterine infections.
Other benefits of spaying or neutering your pet rabbit will be avoiding urinary tract
infections,
uterine cancer,
uterine disease, mammary gland disease, testicular cancer, as well as
preventing any unwanted pregnancies.
These advantages include decreasing the chances of breast tumors later in life, decreasing the chance of cystic ovaries and
uterine infections later in life, decreasing the desire to roam the neighborhood, decreasing the incidence of prostate cancer later in life, helping
prevent spraying and marking, and also decreases the surplus of unwanted kittens.
Spaying helps
prevent breast tumors and
uterine infections.
It decreases the risk for breast cancer and
uterine infection in females and helps
prevent prostate and testicular disease in males.
Uterine infections, including pyometra which is a serious, life - threatening
infection of the uterus, common in older intact females is
prevented due to the uterus being removed.
These advantages include decreasing the chances of breast tumors later in life, decreasing the chance of cystic ovaries and
uterine infections later in life, decreasing the desire to roam the neighborhood, decreasing the incidence of prostate cancer later in life, helping
prevent spraying and marking, and also decreases the surplus of unwanted kittens that may be euthanized at the shelters.
It is done to
prevent unwanted pregnancies, help control the pet population, and to decrease the risk of dangerous health conditions such as mammary (breast) cancer,
uterine infections, and other types of cancers.
It also protects your dog from
uterine infections (pyometras), reduces the risk of mammary cancer, and
prevents heat cycles.