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Gus’s owner, a retired teacher named Eleanor, wrung her hands in the exam room. “He bit the groomer, Dr. Chen. Drew blood. And last week, he snapped at my grandson—just for walking near his food bowl.”

This is where veterinary science meets behavioral biology. Research shows that over 80% of dogs labeled “aggressive” toward familiar people have an underlying medical condition—arthritis, dental disease, ear infections, hypothyroidism, or even neurological issues. Pain lowers the threshold for reactive behavior. An animal that cannot escape a painful stimulus learns that biting makes it stop . Gus’s owner, a retired teacher named Eleanor, wrung

Maya watched Gus through the one-way observation window. The dog wasn’t snarling or lunging. Instead, he was pressed against the far corner of the kennel run, tail tucked so tightly it disappeared, ears flat against his skull. His lips were pulled back, but not in a dominant snarl—in a fear grimace . Drew blood

Dr. Maya Chen had been a veterinarian for twelve years, but some cases still made her pause. This one arrived on a Tuesday afternoon in the form of a 35-kilogram Labrador retriever named Gus, whose chart was already thick with warnings: “AGGRESSIVE — MUZZLE REQUIRED.” Pain lowers the threshold for reactive behavior