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Senior careItalian Greyhound

Caring for a senior Italian Greyhound

Your Italian Greyhound is a senior at
8years

Geriatric by ~12 years. Thresholds follow the AAHA 2019 canine life-stage framework with size-adjusted timing (Fortney, 2012).

"Italian Greyhound studio portrait"
Threshold

When Italian Greyhounds become senior

The American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA) recognizes four adult life stages for dogs: young adult, mature adult, senior, and geriatric. The senior threshold is not a fixed number of years; it moves earlier for larger dogs and later for smaller ones.

For your Italian Greyhound specifically
Senior
8 yr
Shift to biannual wellness and senior-panel bloodwork
Geriatric
12 yr
Care priorities shift toward comfort and cognitive support
Size category
Small
Drives the timing of the senior threshold
AAHA framework
4 stages
Young adult · Mature · Senior · Geriatric
What to watch for

Signs of aging in Italian Greyhounds

These are observational cues — patterns owners often notice, not diagnoses. If something on this list becomes persistent or sudden, book a veterinary exam.

  • Mobility

    Stiffness after rest, hesitation on stairs, shorter tolerance on walks. The pattern usually builds slowly over weeks or months.

  • Vision & hearing

    Slower response to calls, bumping into furniture in low light, cloudy-looking eyes. Many dogs adapt remarkably well to mild loss.

  • Cognitive

    Disorientation in familiar spaces, altered sleep-wake cycles, staring at walls. Canine cognitive dysfunction is recognized and has veterinary management options.

  • Appetite & weight

    Shifts in either direction — loss or gain — deserve attention. Senior metabolism changes, but sudden changes are a reason to schedule a visit.

  • Skin & coat

    Dryer skin, coarser coat, new lumps or bumps. Lumps in particular should always be shown to a veterinarian rather than watched indefinitely.

  • Behavior

    New anxiety, clinginess, or withdrawal. Behavioral change in senior dogs is often the first surface signal of discomfort or cognitive shift.

Nutrition

Nutrition for senior Italian Greyhounds

General principles drawn from AAHA, AAFCO, and NRC 2006. Specific portions, protein levels, and supplement decisions belong in a conversation with your veterinarian — this page doesn't set dosages.

  • 01

    Calorie adjustment

    Daily energy needs typically drop 20–30% from the adult-maintenance level once a dog moves into senior territory, driven by lower activity and slower basal metabolism.

    National Research Council, Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats (2006).

  • 02

    Protein quality

    Healthy senior dogs benefit from adequate, high-quality protein to preserve lean muscle. Protein restriction is reserved for specific conditions such as chronic kidney disease — and is a vet decision, not a default.

    AAFCO Senior/All-Life-Stages framework; WSAVA Global Nutrition Guidelines.

  • 03

    Joint supplements

    Glucosamine and chondroitin are widely used in senior dogs. Evidence quality is mixed, and response varies by individual. Discuss before starting.

    AAHA 2019 Canine Life Stage Guidelines.

  • 04

    Omega-3 fatty acids

    EPA and DHA from fish oil have support in the literature for joint comfort and cognitive function. Amount depends on body weight — ask your veterinarian for your dog's target.

    Morris Animal Foundation; AAHA Nutritional Assessment Guidelines.

Exercise

Exercise modifications

Keep moving — just differently. Senior Italian Greyhounds still benefit from daily activity; the shape of that activity changes.

  • 01

    Shorter, more frequent sessions

    Two 15- to 20-minute walks often beat one 45-minute walk for a senior dog. Movement stays regular; recovery windows shorten.

  • 02

    Lower-impact surfaces

    Grass, sand, and carpeted indoor space are gentler on aging joints than concrete or tile. If nothing else, prefer these surfaces for the brisker portions of a walk.

  • 03

    Warm-up and cool-down

    Five slow minutes on either side of brisker activity — before and after — consistently reduces stiffness the next day. Simple, effective, evidence-aligned.

Schedule

Veterinary screening schedule

Recommended screens at each life stage for Italian Greyhounds — a starting point for conversations with your veterinarian, not a substitute for one.

Life stageYoung adult1 – 7 yrAnnual
Recommended screens
  • Wellness exam
  • Body-condition score
  • Dental exam
  • Fecal parasite screen
Life stageMature adult7 – 8 yrAnnual, plus baseline bloodwork
Recommended screens
  • Wellness exam
  • Baseline complete blood count + chemistry panel
  • Dental cleaning review
  • Weight-trend discussion
Life stageSenior8 – 12 yrEvery 6 months
Recommended screens
  • Wellness exam
  • Complete blood count + chemistry panel
  • Thyroid panel
  • Urinalysis
  • Blood-pressure check
Life stageGeriatric12+ yr (to ~16)Every 6 months
Recommended screens
  • Wellness exam + cognitive screening
  • Comprehensive bloodwork
  • Cardiac auscultation
  • Dental evaluation
  • Pain-management review

Schedule above follows the AAHA 2019 canine life-stage guidelines with size-adjusted thresholds per Fortney (2012). Your veterinarian may recommend a different cadence based on your dog's history.

Products

Senior-dog gear worth considering

Affiliate disclosure. Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you buy through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only link to products we'd recommend regardless of commission.

  • Sleep & restAffiliate

    Orthopedic memory-foam dog bed

    Thicker supportive foam distributes weight off pressure points. Many senior owners describe a noticeable improvement in morning stiffness.

    Check on Amazon
  • TractionAffiliate

    Non-slip floor runners

    Hardwood and tile are the most common home-hazard surfaces for senior dogs. Non-slip runners down hallways and near food/water reduce slips.

    Check on Amazon
  • SupplementAffiliate

    Joint-support supplement chews

    Joint-support supplement chews are widely marketed for senior dogs. Product effects, appropriate use, and interactions vary significantly — ask your veterinarian before starting any supplement, especially alongside NSAIDs or kidney-related medication.

    Check on Amazon
References

Sources

Senior-care guidance on this page follows the sources below. Your veterinarian is the final reference for your dog specifically.

  1. AKC breed standardAmerican Kennel Club breed page

    Breed size, weight range, height, AKC group, origin, coat type, and temperament baseline.

  2. RVC VetCompassRoyal Veterinary College VetCompass life-table research (McMillan et al. 2024)

    UK primary-care records; source for the median-lifespan and mortality figures.

  3. AAHA 2019 guidelineCreevy KE et al. — 2019 AAHA Canine Life Stage Guidelines (American Animal Hospital Association)

    Canine life-stage framework; source for the senior and geriatric threshold definitions and the preventive-care schedule.

  4. Fortney 2012Fortney WD — Implementing a Successful Senior/Geriatric Health Care Program for Veterinarians (Topics in Companion Animal Medicine, 2012)

    Size-category senior/geriatric threshold table used across every breed page on the site.

  5. NRC 2006National Research Council — Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats (2006, National Academies Press)

    Maintenance Energy Requirement (MER) and protein / fat baselines for adult and senior dogs; cited in the Nutrition section.

  6. AAFCO nutrient profileAAFCO Dog Food Nutrient Profiles — adult maintenance and all-life-stages reference values

    Industry nutrient-profile reference used in US pet-food formulations; cited on the protein-quality card.

  7. Morris Animal FoundationGolden Retriever Lifetime Study — Morris Animal Foundation longitudinal canine health research

    Longitudinal canine cancer and longevity data; source for the Omega-3 / cognitive-support evidence line.