When: Puppies must eat more frequently than adults because their higher metabolism digests food quickly and smaller stomach holds less. Feed new puppies four times a day and gradually decrease the number to two per day by the end of the first year.
How to Prepare: Talk to your veterinarian about the right diet for your puppyand then stick to it. Also ask about vitamin supplements (usually not recommended), treats and table scraps.
Remember: Avoid overfeeding. Diets too high in calories can compromise bone growth in larger breeds and lead to orthopedic problems. They also can result in obesity. If you can't feel your puppy's ribs, you're feeding it too much. Check with your veterinarian and gradually cut back.
The Veterinarian View: "There isn't one food that is right for every single pet," said Eric Eisen, DVM, of Pets Vet of Lakewood in Lakewood, Colo. "Some dogs do well on super-premium foods; others won't touch them. Find out what works well for your individual puppy. And, when switching foods, do so gradually over 10 to 14 days by replacing increasingly larger amounts of the old food with new food."
Spay-Neuter
Take your puppy to be spayed or neutered in the first year.
Why: Thousands of unwanted puppies are born each day in the United States. Most will face euthanization due to a lack of adoptive homes. By spaying or neutering your pet, you are helping to minimize the homeless dog population.
When: The American Veterinary Medical Association endorses spaying/neutering for dogs as early as 8 weeks old. Many veterinarians prefer to wait until 4 to 6 monthswhen vaccinations are completed and the puppy is stronger and better able to withstand the anesthesia.
How to Prepare: Beginning the evening before surgery, your dog must not eat or drinknot even water. Your dog will need about a week to recuperate.
Remember: Sterilization offers behavioral advantages. Females' risk of pregnancy is spared, males' aggressive behavior tempered, the urge to breed eliminated. Males and females will have a lesser tendency to wander when the female is in season.
The Veterinarian View: "Spaying or neutering has many long-term health benefits," Dr. Eisen said. "The chance of mammary cancerone of the top cancers in unspayed femalesis almost completely eliminated. Uterine infections, uterine cancer and ovarian cancer are also virtually eliminated. In males, [risk of] prostate problems, rectal tumors and testicular cancers [is] eliminated, and in dogs with existing rectal tumors, neutering often is the only necessary cure."
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