Two bags of supplements on the counter, one six-year-old Australian Shepherd with mild hip dysplasia and a habit of rocketing off the porch. A skeptical pass through the veterinary evidence: what's actually protecting Mojo's hips, what's hope in a resealable pouch — and what buys him the most good years.
Subject: MOJO · 6 · Australian Shepherd · dx mild hip dysplasia June 2026 · 26 sources read · every claim below survived a 3-judge fact-check or carries its caveat
0
sources fetched
0
claims verified
0
confirmed
0
refuted & cut
Each claim was attacked by 3 independent reviewers. What's below is what survived.
The Sniff Test · Audio Edition
Prefer to listen? The whole audit as a 5-minute podcast.
0:00 / —
Case file Nº 1
MOJO
Age6 — mid-career. The choices made now decide how 10, 12 and 14 feel.
BreedAustralian Shepherd — a burst-drive athlete who plays in sprints, not marathons.
DiagnosisMild hip dysplasia (per the vet) — loose hip fit that grinds toward arthritis over time.
PresentsOccasional evening limp after a hard launch off the porch.
MissionAge well. Slow the arthritis, protect the zoomies, maximize the good years.
No. 01
The takeaway: three moves buy the most good years.
If you read nothing else
The whole audit, ranked by payoff · details & receipts below
1
Feed him lean — worth ~3 extra good years
In the famous lifetime study, lean-fed littermates needed arthritis treatment 3 years later and lived 1.8 years longer. At 6, Mojo is exactly at the fork in this chart.
Age when arthritis treatment became necessary (median, Kealy lifetime study)
Typical-fed littermatesOA treatment by ~10.3 yrs
Lean-fed littermatesOA treatment by ~13.3 yrs · lived +1.8 yrs
Scale 0–14 years · gold line = where Mojo is today. The gap between the two white lines is what lean buys.
Fix the fish-oil dose — chews deliver ~⅕ of the target
Omega-3 is the best-evidenced supplement in canine arthritis — but Welactin's chews underdose it ~5×. Same brand's liquid hits the full therapeutic dose for about $21/mo.
Let the Dasuquin run out — it tested at placebo level
0% of trials in the big meta-analysis showed an effect for glucosamine/chondroitin; the authors said it "should no longer be recommended." Spend the same money on moves 1 and 2.
Also in the plan: daily steady walks (muscle is hip suspension), a limp log, and a vet visit to bless the dosing — the full 7-step protocol is at the bottom of the page.
No. 02
Mojo's numbers: set his weight, get his doses.
Slide to Mojo's vet-chart weight (AKC says Aussie males run 50–65 lb, females 40–55) and everything below recomputes — fish-oil target, scoops, costs, and a calorie ballpark for the lean plan.
The Mojo calculator
Every number on this page, at his actual weight
Mojo weighs
50lb · 22.7 kg
Defaulting to mid-band for a male Aussie — drag to his real number from the vet chart.
Daily EPA+DHA target (CSU joint max)
—
310 mg × kg0.75 · start at ~— and ramp up over 2–3 weeks with the vet's OK
Welactin liquid to hit it
—
— · ≈ —/mo at the $30 bottle · bottle lasts —
Same dose in soft chews (why we're switching)
—
≈ —/mo at $24.97 per 60 — the format makes the right dose absurd
Lean-feeding calorie ballpark
—
resting need (70 × kg0.75) ≈ — kcal · shown ×1.4–1.6 for a neutered adult · treat budget (10%): — kcal
Formulas: CSU fish-oil chart (verified 3-0) and the standard veterinary resting-energy equation. The calorie number is a starting ballpark, not a prescription — activity, age and body-condition score move it, so have the vet set Mojo's actual target. If he needs to LOSE weight, vets feed to the ideal weight, not the current one.
No. 03
The dose gap: the label feeds about a sixth of what worked in trials.
Colorado State's veterinary teaching hospital publishes the osteoarthritis target: 310 mg of EPA+DHA per kg0.75 per day. Here's what the soft-chew label delivers against that target, by dog size.
Label dose vs. therapeutic target
EPA+DHA per day — chews at label dose vs. the CSU joint target
20 lb dog1 chew = 255 mg of 1,623 mg0%
40 lb dog2 chews = 510 mg of 2,730 mg0%
Aussies usually land in the 40–60 lb band — dose off Mojo's vet-chart weight, not a guess
60 lb dog3 chews = 765 mg of 3,700 mg0%
Same brand, liquid formWelactin 16 oz liquid · 1,440 mg per scoop · titrated up with the vet0%
≈ 1–2.5 scoops/day hits the target for a 20–60 lb dog — about $13–29/mo at the $30 bottle price
Targets: CSU Veterinary Health System fish-oil dosing chart (310 mg/kg0.75, their safety-derived max) — verified 3-0 ×4. Start at ~¼ of target and ramp up with your vet; GI upset is the common failure mode.
Why the dose matters
The 177-dog dose-response trial, in one row
1×
No significant benefit
Baseline omega-3 food. Lameness and weight-bearing didn't significantly improve.
2×
Still no significant benefit
Double dose — serum EPA/DHA rose, but the clinical scores didn't reach significance.
3×
Significant improvement
Only the highest dose significantly improved lameness, weight-bearing, and arthritis progression.
Fritsch 2010, randomized multi-site trial — verified 3-0. (Industry-funded by Hill's; the dose-dependence held up in review.) A label dose at ~16% of target sits far left of this chart.
The punchline: the bag marketed for his coat is quietly his best joint play — but at chew-label doses he's likely getting coat benefits and not much else. The fix costs nothing extra: same brand, liquid bottle, proper scoops.
No. 04
Feeding lean without the sad eyes.
The lifetime-study dogs ate 25% less and lived longer — but nobody wants a mopey Aussie staring holes through dinner. The trick: cut calories, not ritual. Mojo can't count kcal; he counts meals, chews, and minutes of attention. Standard vet weight-management playbook below.
Move 1 · measure
A gram scale, not a scoop
Eyeballed cups drift 10–20% — which on a 50 lb dog is the entire lean margin. Weigh the daily ration once, mark the container, done. He cannot tell the difference. The scale can.
Move 2 · same treats, new source
Pay him from his own paycheck
Set aside part of the measured daily kibble in a treat jar — that's the training currency for the day. Same number of rewards, zero extra calories. Aussies care about the event, not the size.
Move 3 · volume swap
Big, crunchy, nearly free
Swap calorie-dense biscuits for produce most dogs love:
Snuffle mat, puzzle feeder, or kibble scattered in the yard. Same food, 10× the duration, and it feeds the herding brain — for an Aussie this doubles as the enrichment he's actually begging for.
Move 5 · split it
Two or three smaller meals
The same total ration in more sittings means he's never far from the next meal. Hunger-related begging drops without a single calorie added.
Move 6 · re-read the begging
The sad eyes usually aren't hunger
For a smart herding dog, begging is often a bid for engagement. Answer with a sniff walk, two minutes of trick work, or a game — it satisfies the ask and builds the hip muscle while it's at it.
The progress check · every 2 weeks
Hands in the fur, dog on the scale
Aussie coats hide everything — you cannot eyeball a double-coated dog's waistline. Part the fur: ribs should be easy to feel under light pressure with a visible tuck-up from the side. Bi-weekly weigh-ins (vet lobby scales are free) catch drift while it's still a 2% problem. Target: hold lean, lose slowly if the vet says trim — about 1–2% of body weight per week, max.
No. 05
The porch limp, decoded: a textbook dysplasia flare — and a training plan, not a crisis.
Fine all day, one hard launch off the porch, a limp by evening. That on-and-off, worse-after-exercise pattern is the classic presentation of hip dysplasia (Merck Veterinary Manual, Cornell, ACVS). A loose hip tolerates steady work fine — what it hates is explosive acceleration and hard landings, which is unfortunately Mojo's favorite genre.
THE FLARE-MAKERporch launch · hard fetch sprints
✶
EVENING LIMP
WHY: explosive accel + landing slams a joint that doesn't fit tight. The limp is the hip filing a complaint hours later.
THE HIP-BUILDERlong leash walks · swimming
MUSCLE = SUSPENSION
WHY: steady low-impact work builds the muscle that holds a loose hip together — the standard first-line management for dysplasia.
The play, not the ban: nobody's cancelling zoomies — for an Aussie that's quality of life. The move is making the daily base steady work (a long sniffy walk every day beats weekend hero sessions; swimming is the gold-standard low-impact option), warming him up before play, and keeping a simple limp log. A limp that lasts more than a day or two, or starts showing up more often, is the vet's cue to re-examine and consider the next tier. This section is standard veterinary guidance, not part of the adversarial fact-check.
No. 06
The Aussie file: breed-specific intel.
Things that are true because Mojo is an Australian Shepherd, not just a dog. One of them matters directly to the medication tier of this plan.
TEST HIM
MDR1 — the Aussie drug-sensitivity gene
Australian Shepherds are one of the most-affected breeds for the MDR1 (ABCB1) mutation — roughly half of Aussies carry at least one copy (Washington State University runs the definitive cheek-swab test, ~$60). Affected dogs react badly to certain drugs: high-dose ivermectin-class dewormers, loperamide (Imodium — never give it to an untested Aussie), some sedatives, and several chemo agents. Good news for this plan: NSAIDs like carprofen and Librela aren't on the MDR1 problem list. But Mojo is 6 and heading into the years where medications multiply — knowing his status once means every future prescription gets checked against it. Worth doing before the pain-med tier ever becomes relevant.
BREED TRAIT
Burst athletes by design
Herding breeds work in explosive sprint-stop-pivot patterns — exactly the load profile a dysplastic hip hates most (see the porch-limp section). The fix isn't less Aussie; it's a steady daily exercise base under the bursts and a hind-end warm-up before hard play.
COAT TRAP
The double coat hides his waistline
That gorgeous coat means body-condition checks must be by hand, not eye — a fluffy Aussie can look "fine" carrying 10 extra pounds. Ribs by touch, every couple of weeks. (This is why the lean plan above uses a scale, not a glance.)
REFERENCE
What "lean" means for his frame
AKC band: males 50–65 lb, females 40–55 lb — but frame varies; the vet's body-condition score (aim 4–5 on the 9-point scale) outranks any chart. Hip dysplasia runs in the breed (ASHGI tracks it; breeding stock gets OFA-screened), so a mild diagnosis at 6 with management starting now is a genuinely good position to be in.
Breed facts: WSU Veterinary Clinical Pharmacology Lab (MDR1), AKC breed standard, ASHGI. Standard veterinary references — not run through the adversarial pipeline.
The supporting research
Everything above, with receipts — the trials, the effect sizes, the prices, and the full protocol.
No. 07
The evidence scoreboard: every supplement, one chart.
The 2022 meta-analysis (72 trials, the most comprehensive ever done on canine and feline arthritis nutraceuticals) measured each category's analgesic effect size vs. control. Right of the line helps. Left of the line is worse than doing nothing.
Standardized effect size (Cohen's d) on arthritis pain
0% of trials showed effect · "should no longer be recommended" — the meta-analysis authors
← worse than control · 0 · better than control →
All four rows verified 3-0. One nuance that also survived review: P&G-style industry trials with good prep found G/C "not worse than placebo" — nobody serious claims it beats placebo.
No. 08
The two bags, audited: one flunked,one's underdosed.
Both are Nutramax — a respected veterinary brand. That's not the problem. The problem is what's inside one of them doesn't beat placebo in dogs, and the other is being fed at a fraction of the dose that worked in trials.
FLUNKED THE TRIALS
For his hip · glucosamine + chondroitin + ASU + MSM · 84 chews
Dasuquin with MSM
~$50–68 per bag · ≈ $9–18/mo at maintenance dosing
The hardest finding in the whole audit: the 2022 meta-analysis covering 72 trials found glucosamine/chondroitin products showed an effect in 0% of trials, performed significantly worse than every other category, and the authors concluded they "should no longer be recommended." A 2023 head-to-head RCT in 75 dogs with hip arthritis put it on a force plate: indistinguishable from placebo, while green-lipped mussel and the NSAID carprofen both clearly worked. It almost certainly isn't hurting Mojo. It's just very unlikely to be helping that hip.
✓ verified 3-0 ×6 · the two classic pro-glucosamine claims (McCarthy 2007) were refuted 1-2 in review — that trial had no placebo arm · caveat: the ASU + MSM extras are less-studied; the verdict is on the main actives
RIGHT IDEA WRONG DOSE
For his coat + joints · EPA/DHA fish oil · 60 soft chews
Welactin Omega-3 Soft Chews
~$25 per bag · chew = 255 mg EPA+DHA per 20 lb of dog
Omega-3 fish oil is the single best-evidenced supplement in all of canine arthritis research — the same meta-analysis that flunked glucosamine gave omega-3 the largest effect of any category, and a 131-dog trial showed it let dogs cut their NSAID dose. The coat benefit is real too (it's the best-supported skin/coat supplement in dogs). The catch: the chew's label dose delivers roughly one-sixth of the therapeutic target veterinary hospitals use for joints — and the dose-response trial in section 03 shows why that gap matters.
✓ verified 3-0 ×10 · effect is real but modest — an adjunct, not a cure: one rigorous placebo-controlled trial found only a small within-group benefit at 16 weeks
No. 09
What actually moves the needle for an arthritic hip.
Ranked by evidence strength, with real June-2026 prices — and for a 6-year-old with mild dysplasia whose mission is aging well, the best-proven option is free and starts at the food bowl.
Mojo's aging-well lever
Non-drug · first-line · evidence category of its own
Keep him lean — the 3-extra-years play
$0/mo — it usually saves money
The most famous experiment in dog nutrition fed one group of Labrador littermates 25% less food for life. The lean dogs needed long-term arthritis treatment three years later (median 13.3 vs 10.3 years old), only half as many had hip arthritis on X-ray at end of life, and they lived a median 1.8 years longer. A six-year-old with mild hip dysplasia is precisely the dog those curves are about. The 2024 systematic review independently ranks weight control above every supplement. Ask the vet for a body-condition score and target weight at the next visit — for an Aussie, ribs easily felt and a visible waist.
✓ verified 3-0 · Pye et al. 2024, J Small Animal Practice · Kealy et al., JAVMA (48-Labrador lifetime study) — single colony, one breed: treat the exact years as directional, the lean-ages-better conclusion as solid · the timeline chart for this study is up in the Takeaway
Supplement swap · green-lipped mussel · PCSO-524
Antinol Plus
$50/60-gels · ≈$25–50/mo (−20% on subscription)
The strongest supplement result in the 2023 RCT: matched carprofen — a prescription NSAID — on objective force-plate gait measures at 6 weeks, with a large effect size (d = 1.1), in exactly his problem: hip arthritis. It's an omega-3-rich marine extract, so it plays the same biochemical game as fish oil, concentrated.
Evidence strengthstrong (1 good RCT + meta-analysis)
✓ verified 3-0 ×3 · dose in trial ≈ 5 mg/kg/day of the extract
Dose fix · same brand he already buys
Welactin Liquid, dosed right
$30/16-oz bottle · ≈$13–29/mo at full CSU target
The cheapest evidence-backed move on this page. The liquid packs 1,440 mg EPA+DHA per scoop (the chew: 255 mg), so the therapeutic target stops being a math fantasy. Covers the coat goal automatically — skin/coat benefits show up at lower doses than joints need. Titrate up over 2–3 weeks with the vet's blessing.
Evidence strengthbest-in-class for a supplement
✓ verified 3-0 ×10 · honest framing: a modest adjunct, not a painkiller replacement
The vet tier — when supplements aren't enough
NSAIDs · Librela · (Adequan: unevaluated)
Carprofen ≈ $10–30/mo + monitoring · Librela ≈ $85–175/mo at the vet
NSAIDs (carprofen, meloxicam) are the gold standard — they beat glucosamine head-to-head and returned gait to normal in trials; they need periodic bloodwork. Librela, the monthly anti-nerve-growth-factor injection, matched daily meloxicam in a 101-dog randomized trial with fewer adverse events, working by day 14 — the modern option if pills are a fight or NSAIDs aren't tolerated. Adequan injections came up in the question but no claim about them survived verification, so this audit can't rank them — ask the vet. If he's visibly stiff, sore after walks, or slow on stairs, this tier is a vet conversation worth having now, not after another bag of chews.
✓ verified 3-0 + 2-1 · Librela "non-inferiority" is a mild statistical read of a superiority-designed trial — the substantive result (works about as well as a daily NSAID) held up
No. 10
The switch math: same money, all of it on evidence.
Monthly cost for a 40 lb dog, current routine vs. the evidence-aligned one. Prices are June 2026 shelf checks (California Pet Pharmacy, Antinol direct, Lambert Vet Supply) — spot-check at purchase.
Today's routine
Dasuquin w/ MSM$9–18/mo
0% of meta-analysis trials showed an effect
Welactin soft chews (label dose)$25/mo
≈19% of the joint-therapeutic dose
Hitting the target with chews instead($130+/mo)
≈11 chews a day — the format makes the right dose absurd
TOTAL$34–43/mo
What the money buys: a placebo-tier joint chew + a great supplement at a sub-clinical dose. The coat is probably the only thing fully covered.
The evidence plan
Weight check + body-condition score$0
ranked above every supplement
Welactin LIQUID at CSU target≈$21/mo
full joint dose + coat covered, same brand
Optional: Antinol Plus (GLM)$25–40/mo
the supplement that matched an NSAID in his exact condition
Dasuquin$0 — don't re-buy
TOTAL$21–61/mo
What the money buys: every dollar on the right side of the effect-size chart — at the dose that was actually tested.
No. 11
The action plan, in order.
Mojo's aging-well protocol
Seven moves · run the medical changes past the vet — that part isn't optional
Take this to the vet: mention the post-burst limp pattern, ask for a body-condition score and target weight, and get their yes on the fish-oil dose plan. They'll say if the mild dysplasia is due for an X-ray re-check.
Feed him lean — this is the 3-extra-years lever. Lean-fed dogs in the lifetime study hit arthritis treatment 3 years later and lived 1.8 years longer. Measured meals, stingy with the extras.
Make the daily base steady work: a long sniffy leash walk every day (swimming if you can get it), a warm-up before hard play. Keep the zoomies — just don't let them be the only exercise he gets.
Let the Dasuquin bag run out and don't replace it. No taper needed; it isn't doing anything to withdraw from.
Swap Welactin chews → Welactin liquid (16 oz, ~$30). Start at about a quarter of the CSU target, ramp up over 2–3 weeks, always with food. Soft stool or fishy burps = split the dose or back off a notch.
Consider adding Antinol Plus for the hip specifically — the one supplement that went toe-to-toe with a prescription NSAID and held.
Keep a limp log. A limp lasting past a day or two, limps getting more frequent, or visible stiffness despite 8–12 weeks of all the above — that's the NSAID / Librela conversation, the tier with the strongest evidence of all.