Effects of Thyroidal Disturbance on the Behavior of Domestic Dogs (Canis Lupus Familiaris)

Hypothyroidism is not uncommon in dogs, but it is actually very often diagnosed in elderly dogs. When and how does the disease start? What are the first recognizable signs? The first symptoms are usually changes in the behavior. First, these changes are quite subtle, but as the illness progresses, t...

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Published in:Journal of Zoological Research
Main Authors: Klimm, Sandra, Silbermann, Jennifer, Thoren, Svenja ten, Gansloßer, Udo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BILINGUAL PUBLISHING CO. 2022
Subjects:
T4
TSH
Online Access:https://ojs.bilpublishing.com/index.php/jzr/article/view/4546
https://doi.org/10.30564/jzr.v4i3.4546
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spelling ftbilinugalpubl:oai:ojs.bbwpublisher.com:article/4546 2023-05-15T15:51:10+02:00 Effects of Thyroidal Disturbance on the Behavior of Domestic Dogs (Canis Lupus Familiaris) Klimm, Sandra Silbermann, Jennifer Thoren, Svenja ten Gansloßer, Udo 2022-07-07 application/pdf https://ojs.bilpublishing.com/index.php/jzr/article/view/4546 https://doi.org/10.30564/jzr.v4i3.4546 eng eng BILINGUAL PUBLISHING CO. https://ojs.bilpublishing.com/index.php/jzr/article/view/4546/3798 https://ojs.bilpublishing.com/index.php/jzr/article/view/4546 doi:10.30564/jzr.v4i3.4546 Copyright © 2022 Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 CC-BY-NC Journal of Zoological Research; Vol 4, No 3 (2022); 1-6 2630-5100 Hypothyroidism T4 TSH Aggressiveness Trainability Sociability Extraversion Stability info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2022 ftbilinugalpubl https://doi.org/10.30564/jzr.v4i3.4546 2022-10-04T17:33:34Z Hypothyroidism is not uncommon in dogs, but it is actually very often diagnosed in elderly dogs. When and how does the disease start? What are the first recognizable signs? The first symptoms are usually changes in the behavior. First, these changes are quite subtle, but as the illness progresses, they can get very grave. We do often hear from the worried owners, that their report of a behavioral change to their vet is often ignored, not taken seriously or simply interpreted as unsteady or insufficient dog training/ education. This not taking seriously of the first signs is very concerning and a big problem in many ways. It is delaying the finding of the right diagnosis and treatment, which leads to suffering of the animal and the owner. In some cases, it leads to giving the dog up as an unbearable danger to the family. So the dog, who is only ill and could be back to normal with the right medical treatment, and finally ends up in a dog shelter or a new family. The common understanding is, that hypothyreoidism is an illness solely occurring in the elderly dog. In contrast to this, the authors found out, that thyroidal problems occur already at relatively young ages. This is a very important finding, considering that many clinically practising veterinarians expect hypothyreoidism only in the aged or elderly dog and will not run any diagnostics in relatively young or middle-aged animals. The authors also found significant differences in the personality traits of emotional stability and extraversion. Therefore, we would like to expand the existing studies, so that this widely underestimated topic finally comes to the fore and hopefully, in the future the right diagnostcal steps can be taken at an early stage of the disease. Article in Journal/Newspaper Canis lupus Bilingual Publishing Co. (BPC): E-Journals Journal of Zoological Research 4 3
institution Open Polar
collection Bilingual Publishing Co. (BPC): E-Journals
op_collection_id ftbilinugalpubl
language English
topic Hypothyroidism
T4
TSH
Aggressiveness
Trainability
Sociability
Extraversion
Stability
spellingShingle Hypothyroidism
T4
TSH
Aggressiveness
Trainability
Sociability
Extraversion
Stability
Klimm, Sandra
Silbermann, Jennifer
Thoren, Svenja ten
Gansloßer, Udo
Effects of Thyroidal Disturbance on the Behavior of Domestic Dogs (Canis Lupus Familiaris)
topic_facet Hypothyroidism
T4
TSH
Aggressiveness
Trainability
Sociability
Extraversion
Stability
description Hypothyroidism is not uncommon in dogs, but it is actually very often diagnosed in elderly dogs. When and how does the disease start? What are the first recognizable signs? The first symptoms are usually changes in the behavior. First, these changes are quite subtle, but as the illness progresses, they can get very grave. We do often hear from the worried owners, that their report of a behavioral change to their vet is often ignored, not taken seriously or simply interpreted as unsteady or insufficient dog training/ education. This not taking seriously of the first signs is very concerning and a big problem in many ways. It is delaying the finding of the right diagnosis and treatment, which leads to suffering of the animal and the owner. In some cases, it leads to giving the dog up as an unbearable danger to the family. So the dog, who is only ill and could be back to normal with the right medical treatment, and finally ends up in a dog shelter or a new family. The common understanding is, that hypothyreoidism is an illness solely occurring in the elderly dog. In contrast to this, the authors found out, that thyroidal problems occur already at relatively young ages. This is a very important finding, considering that many clinically practising veterinarians expect hypothyreoidism only in the aged or elderly dog and will not run any diagnostics in relatively young or middle-aged animals. The authors also found significant differences in the personality traits of emotional stability and extraversion. Therefore, we would like to expand the existing studies, so that this widely underestimated topic finally comes to the fore and hopefully, in the future the right diagnostcal steps can be taken at an early stage of the disease.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Klimm, Sandra
Silbermann, Jennifer
Thoren, Svenja ten
Gansloßer, Udo
author_facet Klimm, Sandra
Silbermann, Jennifer
Thoren, Svenja ten
Gansloßer, Udo
author_sort Klimm, Sandra
title Effects of Thyroidal Disturbance on the Behavior of Domestic Dogs (Canis Lupus Familiaris)
title_short Effects of Thyroidal Disturbance on the Behavior of Domestic Dogs (Canis Lupus Familiaris)
title_full Effects of Thyroidal Disturbance on the Behavior of Domestic Dogs (Canis Lupus Familiaris)
title_fullStr Effects of Thyroidal Disturbance on the Behavior of Domestic Dogs (Canis Lupus Familiaris)
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Thyroidal Disturbance on the Behavior of Domestic Dogs (Canis Lupus Familiaris)
title_sort effects of thyroidal disturbance on the behavior of domestic dogs (canis lupus familiaris)
publisher BILINGUAL PUBLISHING CO.
publishDate 2022
url https://ojs.bilpublishing.com/index.php/jzr/article/view/4546
https://doi.org/10.30564/jzr.v4i3.4546
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_source Journal of Zoological Research; Vol 4, No 3 (2022); 1-6
2630-5100
op_relation https://ojs.bilpublishing.com/index.php/jzr/article/view/4546/3798
https://ojs.bilpublishing.com/index.php/jzr/article/view/4546
doi:10.30564/jzr.v4i3.4546
op_rights Copyright © 2022 Author(s)
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC
op_doi https://doi.org/10.30564/jzr.v4i3.4546
container_title Journal of Zoological Research
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