This is a specific conversation about Senior dog care — what changes and what helps — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Getting ahead of joint problems in a Cane Corso at five is exactly the right instinct — these dogs carry serious weight on their frames and hip and elbow issues tend to show up earlier than owners expect. Senior dogs generally need adjustments across nutrition, joint support, dental care, and sometimes sleep setup, but how much and when really does depend on the individual dog and their breed. Before I point you anywhere specific, tell me: is your Corso showing any stiffness at all yet, even minor stuff like slower starts in the morning, and is there anything in their history — weight, previous injuries, vet comments — that I should know about?
No stiffness yet, he seems fine. He's about 58kg, vet said he's a good weight for his size. No injuries. I just know the breed is prone to it and I'd rather do something now than wait.
inparticular.ai
That's a good weight for a male Corso and the fact there's nothing symptomatic yet is exactly why starting now makes sense. At five with no existing damage, you're in the best possible position — you're not trying to reverse anything, you're trying to give the cartilage and connective tissue what they need to hold up under that frame for another eight or nine years. What are you currently feeding him, and is he on anything supplement-wise already?
He's on a good quality kibble, nothing raw. No supplements at all currently.
inparticular.ai
Right, so there's a clear gap to fill and the good news is a well-chosen joint supplement at this stage can make a real difference. For a large-breed dog with no current symptoms who you're starting preventively, I'd go with YuMOVE Advanced 360 for Large Dogs. It's got glucosamine and chondroitin for cartilage support, ActivEase green-lipped mussel which is one of the better-evidenced omega-3 sources for joints specifically, and hyaluronic acid for synovial fluid. The Advanced 360 formula is meaningfully stronger than their standard one, which matters for a dog his size. It comes in a tablet form that most large dogs take without fuss. Give it consistently for at least six weeks before you judge it — preventive work doesn't give you a dramatic before-and-after, but you're building a foundation. One thing to also keep in mind: his sleeping surface matters too. A good orthopaedic bed now, before there's pain, is worth doing.
That makes sense. Is there anything in the diet side of things I should be looking at, or is the supplement enough for now?
inparticular.ai
The supplement handles the targeted joint nutrition well, so you don't need to overhaul the diet if the kibble is genuinely good quality. The one thing worth checking is whether it's a large-breed formula — those are typically better balanced for calcium and phosphorus ratios, which matter for bone density over time in big dogs. If it already is, you're largely sorted. The main diet-related thing to keep watching as he ages is weight — even a couple of kilos extra on a Corso frame adds meaningful load to those hips and elbows. He sounds well-managed now, so just keep it that way. The YuMOVE Advanced 360 plus a good orthopaedic bed and staying lean is a solid preventive package for the next few years.
Perfect, that's really helpful. I'll look up the YuMOVE Advanced 360 now.
inparticular.ai
Good call. Look for the Large Dog version specifically and make sure you're on the Advanced 360 rather than just the standard YuMOVE — the ingredient profile is considerably stronger and for a 58kg dog it's worth it. It's widely available on Amazon UK. You're doing the right thing by him getting ahead of this at five.