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What Human Health Research Can Teach Us About Dogs, Cats, and Horses

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Exclusive for Live Attendees

:gift: Live-Attendee Giveaway!Join us LIVE for a chance to win an exclusive 30-minute discovery call with Dr. Goodenowe. One lucky attendee will be selected at random towards the end of the webinar. Disclaimer: This is a purely educational conversation, not intended to diagnose or treat any disease.

Join Dr. Dayan Goodenowe for a deeply personal and scientifically grounded conversation about the health and longevity of the animals we love most—dogs, cats, and horses. In this exclusive live webinar, Dr. Goodenowe reveals what three decades of human longevity research can teach us about extending the vitality and lifespan of our beloved companions.

The Animals We Love Deserve More Time

If you’ve ever looked at your dog, cat, or horse and wished you could give them more years—more mornings, more rides, more quiet evenings together—you’re not alone.

Millions of pet owners feel this way. And many are starting to ask a question that science is now beginning to answer:

What if the same biochemical insights that are reshaping human longevity research could be applied to our pets?

The answer may be closer than most people think.

Much of what we know today about human health and aging began with animal research. Now, a growing body of science is completing the circle—applying what we’ve learned about human biochemistry back to the animals who helped us understand it in the first place.

The biochemical forces that govern how long and how well a pet lives: cellular energy production, inflammation, oxidative stress, and membrane integrity are the same forces that have been studied in human longevity research for decades.

Understanding them doesn’t just apply to people. It applies to every living system.

And that understanding opens up possibilities that fear and helplessness cannot provide.

Much of what we know today about human health and aging began with animal research. Now, a growing body of science is completing the circle—applying what we’ve learned about human biochemistry back to the animals who helped us understand it in the first place.

The biochemical forces that govern how long and how well a pet lives: cellular energy production, inflammation, oxidative stress, and membrane integrity are the same forces that have been studied in human longevity research for decades.

Understanding them doesn’t just apply to people. It applies to every living system.

And that understanding opens up possibilities that fear and helplessness cannot provide.

Tuesday, March 18th, 2026 | 5 PM Pacific

What Really Happens as Pets Age

Through decades of biochemical research, scientists have identified specific mechanisms that explain why muscle and bone loss accelerates with age:

The challenge is that conventional pet health approaches focus on symptoms, infections, and emergencies rather than addressing the underlying biochemical environment that determines vitality and longevity in the first place.

Consider what research shows about dogs alone: cancer is the leading cause of death in nearly half of all dogs over the age of ten. An estimated 6 million dogs are diagnosed with cancer in the United States every year. One in four dogs will develop malignant cancer in their lifetime.

These aren’t random misfortunes. They reflect biochemical environments that have been compromised over time—environments that can be studied, understood, and potentially influenced.

Why do some dogs remain vibrant and active well into their teens while others decline rapidly after eight or nine years?

The Surprising Truth About Pet Longevity and Human Science

Most people know that animal research has benefited human medicine. What fewer people realize is how directly applicable the reverse now is.

Dogs, cats, and horses live in our environments. They share our air, our water, our homes, and in many cases, our stress. They are exposed to many of the same biochemical disruptions that affect human health. And they experience the same fundamental aging processes at the cellular level.

The dog population alone represents one of the most powerful windows into aging biology that exists with more medical records available on companion animals than on nearly any other species on earth. Research has confirmed that canine cancer behaves in biologically similar ways to human cancer. The same inflammatory cascades, the same oxidative damage patterns, the same membrane lipid disruptions seen in aging humans are seen in aging dogs.

This means that the insights Dr. Goodenowe has spent 30+ years developing about human biochemistry, about cellular membrane health, about mitochondrial function, and about the biochemical prodromes of disease that are directly applicable to the health and longevity of companion animals.

Understanding the cellular mechanisms of pet aging is not a niche concern. With more than half of U.S. pets currently estimated to be overweight or obese, and with cancer now accounting for nearly half of all adult dog deaths, the need for a deeper biochemical understanding of pet health has never been greater.

The good news: these are measurable systems. And measurement creates the possibility of understanding, and of action.

Understanding the cellular mechanisms of pet aging is not a niche concern. With more than half of U.S. pets currently estimated to be overweight or obese, and with cancer now accounting for nearly half of all adult dog deaths, the need for a deeper biochemical understanding of pet health has never been greater.

The good news: these are measurable systems. And measurement creates the possibility of understanding, and of action.

Join Dr. Dayan Goodenowe in this exclusive live webinar as we explore:

Register Now — This Science Changes Everything

Dr. Goodenowe presents research that challenges how most pet owners think about animal health—revealing the deep biochemical connections between human longevity science and the vitality of our companion animals.

 

If you love your pet and want to give them the best possible chance at a long, vibrant life, this is the presentation to attend.

MARCH 18TH, 5PM PACIFIC

INTRODUCING OUR SPEAKER

Dr. Dayan Goodenowe

Dr. Dayan Goodenowe is a world-renowned neuroscientist whose research into the biochemical mechanisms of disease started in 1990. His curiosity about the biochemistry of life remains as insatiable today as it was over three decades ago.

 

Dr. Goodenowe invented and developed advanced diagnostic and bioinformatic technologies, designed and manufactured novel biochemical precursors, and identified biochemical prodromes of numerous diseases including Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, stroke, autism, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, and the biological mechanisms of aging.

 

As the founder of Prodrome Sciences and author of the bestselling book “Breaking Alzheimer’s,” Dr. Goodenowe’s research focuses on identifying and correcting the biochemical imbalances that affect cellular function—long before disease becomes irreversible.

 

His current focus is to defeat the entropy of aging by creating strategic biochemical and biofunctional reserve capacity in advance of known disease risks, enabling the human body to maintain optimal physical and biological functions.

As the founder of Prodrome Science and author of the bestselling book "Breaking Alzheimer's," Dr. Goodenowe's research focuses on identifying and correcting the biochemical imbalances that affect brain function—long before symptoms become irreversible.


His current focus is to defeat the entropy of aging by creating strategic biochemical and biofunctional reserve capacity in advance of known disease risks, enabling the human body to maintain optimal physical and biological functions.


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A New Way to Think About Pet Health and Longevity

This presentation offers an evidence-based, scientifically-grounded exploration of what the latest human longevity research reveals about the biological systems that govern pet health—and what that knowledge opens up for the animals we love.

What You'll Discover:

Live Webinar Details

Exclusive for Live Attendees

:gift: Live-Attendee Giveaway!Join us LIVE for a chance to win an exclusive 30-minute discovery call with Dr. Goodenowe. One lucky attendee will be selected at random towards the end of the webinar. Disclaimer: This is a purely educational conversation, not intended to diagnose or treat any disease.

IT'S GOING TO BE A LECTURE YOU WON'T WANT TO MISS

Why Attend This Live Webinar?

Don't Miss This Groundbreaking Presentation

Whether you’re a dog owner seeking to add years to a beloved companion, a horse owner invested in the long-term health and performance of your animal, or simply someone who believes that science should serve every living thing we love—this presentation provides insights backed by decades of biochemical research.

Dr. Goodenowe will explain the biochemistry of aging in a way that everyone can understand, and reveal why the knowledge that came from animal research deserves to be given back to the animals who made it possible.

GROUNDBREAKING RESEARCH REVEALED

What People Are Saying About Dr. Goodenowe's Work

The Science of Loving Your Pet Starts Here

  • Join pet owners and animal enthusiasts discovering what biochemical science reveals about longevity and vitality—for themselves, and for the animals they love most.

Tuesday, March 18th, 2026 | 5:00 PM Pacific

This event is presented by Perpetual Health in partnership with Prodrome Sciences. Dr. Goodenowe’s research-based insights are grounded in peer-reviewed science and decades of biochemical research.

 

This presentation is for educational purposes only and not intended as medical or veterinary advice.

 

Consult with qualified veterinary and healthcare professionals regarding any health concerns or treatment decisions for your animals. Always work with a licensed veterinarian for the health care needs of your pets and animals.