Method to improve quality of life in non-primate animals by administration of Dehydroepiandrosterone Sulfate (DHEAS) sufficient to achieve primate-specific levels of circulating DHEAS that are not natural to the target species
Canine quality of life, as judged by playfulness and sociability, rapidly declines as a dog ages. Dehydroepiandrosterone Sulfate (DHEAS) is an androgen that opposes cortisol in the fight or flight response, and we have proposed that wolves with exceptionally high circulating levels of DHEAS were the ones that interacted with humans, initiating the process of domestication that led to canis familiaris familiaris, the dogs we know today. Primates, particularly humans, have extremely high levels of circulating DHEAS. We discovered that administering primate levels of DHEA to canines dramatically increases their quality of life, as judged by remarkable increases in their playfulness and sociability. This discovery appears poised to maintain canine “puppy-like” behavior throughout the canine lifespan.