Osteosarcoma (Bone Cancer)
Aggressive bone cancer common in large breeds, often requiring amputation.
The Sloughi is elegant, fast, and graceful. But sighthounds face unique health risks - bone cancer, heart disease, and bloat are the dark side of that athletic build.
Aggressive bone cancer common in large breeds, often requiring amputation.
Life-threatening stomach twist requiring emergency surgery.
Enlarged, weakened heart muscle leading to heart failure.
Underactive thyroid causing weight gain, lethargy, and coat problems.
Dental disease. Cleaning/extractions
Inherited blindness. Management
Airway nerve damage. Surgery
Chronic skin allergies.
Up to 40% of adult dogs are overweight. Obesity accelerates joint deterioration, increases cardiac load, and shortens life expectancy by 1–2 years.
№02
Estimated total vet and insurance costs over a Sloughi's 12-year lifespan — routine care, insurance premiums, and the most likely health issues.
Premiums typically rise 15-20% per year. By senior age, your monthly payment can easily be 3x what you started with.
Once your dog gets a chronic diagnosis, you can't switch insurers. No other company will cover a sick animal.
Many companies drastically cut hereditary condition coverage after age 6. Even if you've been paying faithfully since puppyhood.
The insurer doesn't need a diagnosis. A vet note from years ago saying 'dog limped slightly today' is enough to deny any future orthopedic claim.
If your dog tears a ligament in one leg, the insurer automatically stops covering the other (healthy) leg too.
Insurers use AI to scan thousands of pages of medical records with one goal: find a 'kill-word' to deny your claim.
Ligament and hip claims often have a 6-12 month waiting period. Any symptom during that window means zero coverage for the rest of your dog's life.
The insurer doesn't pay your actual bill - just the 'usual, customary and reasonable' rate for your region. Go to a top specialist and you pay the difference.

🇺🇸 US Pet Insurance Guide
Our guide shows exactly what to check in the fine print — before your first claim gets denied.
Insurance GuideSimilar Breeds
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My mother-in-law took her German boxer to the veterinary emergency room — $1,200 in tests, no answers. A different vet solved it in minutes with $8 pills.
That moment stuck with me. When you’re scared for your dog, you’ll pay anything. Some vets take advantage of that. I started digging into vet costs and pet insurance. The policies were confusing, the exclusions buried, the pricing impossible to compare. So I built the resource I wish existed. Real costs, real exclusions, plain speak. I’m not here to sell you a policy. I’m here so you don’t get blindsided.