How I Cured My Dog of Tumors

Sydney Chaney-Thomas
4 min readJul 15, 2021

I’ve updated this article because I think it is really important as I see dogs with tumors all the time and I want to stop and talk to them, but I live in a big city and it’s not really that common to approach people about their dogs.

This is a little off-topic from what I usually write about, but I want to help other people because having a dog covered in tumors is no fun. If this helps even one person it will be worthwhile.

I wrote this when my Golden Doddle was 14 years old. Her name was Polly. To say she is was the love of my life is an understatement. It’s the sad truth, I fell in love with Polly online when she was posted by a breeder in Virginia. Mostly, I fell in love with her face. She has a beautiful face. At least to me, she does. But, of course, I bought her for the kids. A friend of mine told me not to get a dog for the kids because she couldn’t get her kids to even look at the dog. My aunt told me as a mother I will have to take care of the dog, so don’t do it because “the dog will drive you nuts.” She had an incredibly annoying poodle named Herbie that she absolutely hated. One day Herbie mysteriously disappeared…

Still, I thought a family should have a dog. My girls were six and eight. Things did not turn out as anticipated. In my house, we fought over the dog. Everyone was happy to take care of the dog. Even my late husband who told me that dogs were “rats with tails” was not immune to Polly’s Charms. I know, rats have tails right? This topic will require another post.

I digress. The thing is we all loved Polly and she lived to be almost 16 years old. That’s 112 in dog years. During Covid she had what looked like a small tumor on her eyelid. I thought it was cancer. A trip to the vet proved it was not cancer, but benign and not to be worried about. I was relieved, but the tumor kept growing and soon she couldn’t close her eye. It also looked painful. I went back to the vet where I was told they could remove it, but she would lose part of her eyelid. This was not an option. She also had other tumors forming which the vet checked. They were all benign and common in older dogs. I was starting to think a dog riddled with tumors was my future, but then I got a hold of myself. I couldn’t allow this to happen. I searched the internet and bought every dog cancer tumor product I could find. They were expensive and they were not working.

Needless to say, I was frustrated. I stopped ordering the tumor-fighting products. My other problem was my dog wouldn’t eat anything but dog treats. When you’re 98 years old who cares, so she went through a ton of dog treats and biscuits. She gained four pounds. The weight created another problem which was her inability to get up by herself. She would bark and someone would help her up. Luckily for her, we were all home in quarantine.

Polly was banned from the dog treats, but still wouldn’t eat her food. There was a ton of barking for dog treats and this was horribly distracting on the Zoom calls. So, I started making her dog food about four months ago. Who knew she would love broccoli and spinach so much? But she did. She loves it. Slowly the tumors receded and her eye is almost back to normal. Her other tumors are also shrinking. She goes to the dog park almost every day and is doing great. Within months all of the tumors disappeared.

Here is the recipe:

Ingredients:

1 lb ground turkey

2 teaspoons of coconut oil

16 oz bag of frozen broccoli

2 cups fresh spinach

15 oz can of pumpkin purée (unsweetened)

2 teaspoons turmeric

4 cups of filtered water

In a large pot or Dutch oven heat the coconut oil and then add the turkey and cook until brown. Add the rest of the ingredients and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and let simmer until all vegetables are soft.

Pumpkin is a super food for dogs. However, make sure it’s 100% pumpkin without added salt or sugar and is not pie filling. Coconut oil is an anti-inflammatory and helps with the absorption of nutrients. A small amount of spinach is good for dogs as it’s packed with vitamins and nutrients, but limit it to a quarter cup per day.

It’s been wonderful to see such an old dog heal and return to health. Good luck and please contact me if you have any questions. I know how distressing it is to have a dog in pain.

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Sydney Chaney-Thomas

Sydney is a professor at UC Berkeley, a writer, and founder of oceansf.co, a sustainable sailing apparel brand, see sydneychaneythomas.com to read more.