Section: Symptom Guides

Dog Constipation: What Should You Do?

Constipation in a dog can be mild or serious depending on the pattern, timing, and other signs. It may involve local irritation, discomfort, stress, injury, stomach upset, skin changes, or another medical problem. Call your veterinarian when signs are persistent, severe, or worsening.

What symptoms or causes should I watch for?

  • Dehydration: Low fluid intake can make stool harder.
  • Diet change: New food or bones can affect stool.
  • Pain: Back, hip, or anal pain can make defecation difficult.
  • Foreign material: Hair, bones, or objects can cause blockage.
  • Medication or illness: Some conditions slow gut movement.

What can I safely do at home right now?

  • Keep your pet calm: Use a quiet room and limit rough activity until you know what is happening.
  • Check the basics: Look for appetite changes, water intake, bathroom habits, breathing, pain, and energy level.
  • Remove obvious risks: Pick up unsafe food, plants, medication, trash, string, toys, or chemicals.
  • Record details: Write down when it started, how often it happens, and what changed recently.
  • Call your vet: A dog owner should ask for guidance if the sign continues or the pet seems unwell.

When is this an emergency?

Go to an emergency veterinary clinic now if you notice:

  • Trouble breathing, collapse, seizures, or severe weakness.
  • Repeated vomiting, severe diarrhea, blood, or a swollen belly.
  • Obvious pain, inability to walk normally, or crying when touched.
  • Not eating, not drinking, or not urinating normally.
  • Any rapidly worsening sign, especially in a puppy, kitten, senior pet, or chronically ill pet.

What will my veterinarian check?

Your veterinarian will use the history and physical exam to narrow the cause. They may recommend lab work, urine testing, stool testing, imaging, skin or ear tests, or other diagnostics based on the sign.

How can I reduce the risk next time?

Keep water available, avoid bones and unsafe chews, and call if straining continues or your dog seems painful.

Related veterinary guides

References

Disclaimer: This article is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, does not establish a vet-client-patient relationship, and should not replace an in-person evaluation by a licensed veterinarian.