Arthritis (osteoarthritis) affects an estimated 1 in 5 adult dogs — and many owners miss the early signs because dogs instinctively hide pain. By the time obvious limping appears, arthritis is often moderate-to-severe. The good news: with the right combination of medication, lifestyle modification, and supportive care, most arthritic dogs can maintain good quality of life and remain active for years.
What Is Canine Arthritis?
Osteoarthritis is a degenerative joint disease — the protective cartilage that cushions joints breaks down over time, leading to bone-on-bone contact, inflammation, pain, and reduced range of motion. It can affect any joint but is most common in hips, elbows, knees, and the spine. It's progressive — it doesn't get better, but its progression can be significantly slowed and its symptoms managed.
Signs of Arthritis
- Stiffness after rest: The dog gets up slowly, especially in the morning or after lying down, and "warms up" as they move
- Reduced activity and exercise tolerance: Tires faster on walks; reluctant to play or run
- Difficulty with stairs, jumping, or getting in/out of cars
- Limping that's worse after rest and improves with movement (the opposite of soft tissue injuries, which worsen with movement)
- Licking, biting, or chewing at joints
- Behavioral changes: Irritability, reluctance to be touched near painful areas, reduced engagement
- Muscle loss: The dog uses the painful limb less; the muscles over time atrophy
Medical Treatment Options
- NSAIDs (Carprofen, Meloxicam, Galliprant): Prescription anti-inflammatory pain medications. First-line treatment for moderate-to-severe arthritis. Require regular bloodwork monitoring (effect on liver and kidneys). Never substitute human NSAIDs — ibuprofen and Tylenol are toxic to dogs.
- Librela (bedinvetmab): Monthly injection targeting nerve growth factor (a key pain signal in arthritis). Relatively new but showing excellent results for chronic pain without the GI/kidney risks of NSAIDs.
- Gabapentin: Adjunct pain medication, especially for neuropathic pain. Commonly combined with NSAIDs for severe arthritis.
- Corticosteroids: For severe flares; not for long-term use due to side effects.
- Acupuncture: Growing evidence base; some dogs respond very well, especially when combined with traditional medications.
- Canine rehabilitation therapy: Hydrotherapy, underwater treadmill, and targeted exercises preserve muscle mass and joint mobility.
Home Management
- Orthopedic memory foam bed — reduces pressure on joints during sleep
- Non-slip rugs on all hard floors — arthritic dogs lose footing on tile and hardwood
- Ramps or steps for cars and furniture — reduces impact from jumping
- Raised food and water bowls — reduces neck strain for dogs with spinal arthritis
- Short, frequent walks rather than one long session — keeps joints moving without overdoing it
- Weight management — the single most impactful modifiable factor; every extra pound increases joint load significantly
- Warm environment — cold and damp worsen arthritis symptoms
Supplements — What Has Evidence
| Supplement | Evidence Level | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Omega-3 fatty acids (fish oil) | Moderate | Anti-inflammatory; dose matters: EPA+DHA combined |
| Glucosamine + Chondroitin | Mixed — some studies show modest benefit | Safe; often combined |
| Green-lipped mussel | Some positive evidence | Source of omega-3s and glycosaminoglycans |
| UC-II (undenatured collagen) | Promising early studies | May modulate cartilage immune response |
| CBD oil | Insufficient veterinary data | Some owners report benefit; not FDA-approved for dogs |