BrainStuff Classics: Is a 'Dog Year' Really 7 Years? - podcast episode cover

BrainStuff Classics: Is a 'Dog Year' Really 7 Years?

Feb 02, 20204 min
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Episode description

Sure, dogs age differently than humans -- but is a year for us really like seven years for them? Learn the truth about your dog's age in this classic episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey, brain Stuff, Lauren Boglebon here with another classic episode featuring our previous host, Christian Sagar. If you're listening to this episode on the day it comes out and are in the United States, then puppy bowl is upon us. And what better time than to answer the burning question do dogs really age? Seven years? For everyone human year? Hey, welcome to brain Stuff. I'm Christian Sagar, and you may

have heard that dogs age differently from people. It's the old notion of a dog year, right, the idea that one year for humans equals about seven years for a pooch. But is this true or just some tall tale as shaggy dog story. If you will, well, yes and no, and it's mainly no. First, let's talk about aging. Age isn't just some hard and fast measurement of chronology. It's also a measurement of how time affects our bodies. Animals all age, but at different rates. By way of example,

let's look at this seven year myth. By that logic, a fifteen year old dog would be in equivalent years a one d and five year old person. But why do so many dogs live to or past fifteen years old, and so few people live to a hundred and five. It just doesn't add up. And this is because we can't make a simple one to one comparison. There's no concrete equivalency that applies across the board. First, dogs don't all have the same life expectancy, and they don't age

at the same rate either. Think about it this way. A Chihuahua can live to be over fifteen people years old, yipping at us the entire time. However, a larger breed, like a Great Dane, they have a shorter lifespan on the order of seven to eight years. So the size of a dog affects its life expectancy, as does its breed and expected adult weight. Generally, we can make a good guess at a dog's a drange based on these factors. Back to the rate of aging, So dogs undergo a

maturation process just like people. A puppy's first year on the planet equals about more than a decade of people years, but this rule doesn't apply for every year of a dog's life. Afterward, after about two years on Earth, a puppy is officially mature, able to sexually reproduce, and if it were a person. Hey, it could buy booze, it could vote, and maybe it could register for the draft. But in biological terms, dogs also fall victim to the

ravages of age, just like humans. As a pooch ages, she or he may begin to develop arthritis, poor hearing or vision, and other ailments that are common in elderly humans, and they appear to age more quickly in the early years, while they're aging slows in the latter years. But if you'd like to gauge your dog's age and life expectancy, never fear well. It's true that there's no simple multiplication

exercise up lying to all dogs. You can use handy estimation charts to make an educated guess about your pups lifespan. Interesting side note. If this whole seven years thing is a myth, and and we've pretty much established that it is, then where did it come from. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, veterinarian William Fortney speculated that this may have originated as a marketing ploy, meant to encourage pet owners to bring their dogs in for checkups once

a year. So there you have it. Dogs don't exist in some weird rip van Winkle asque time imbalance, and every year for you isn't automatically seven for your favorite canine. However, they do age at a different rate and it's important to keep this in mind. Make sure you stay up to date on vet visits, vaccinations, and field trips. Today's episode was written by Ben Bullen and produced by Tyler Clang. Brain Stuff is production of I Heart Radio's How Stuff Works.

For more on this and lots of other dog on topics, visit our home planet us to forks dot com and for more podcasts from my heart Radio is the I heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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