It does not stop. It keeps coming back.
Every dog owner has dealt with a bout of diarrhoea at some point. A dietary indiscretion, a stress event, a mild infection. It lasts two or three days and resolves. That is acute diarrhoea, and it is, in most cases, a self-limiting problem.
Chronic diarrhoea is something entirely different. It is diarrhoea that persists beyond three weeks, or that recurs repeatedly with insufficient intervals of normal stool in between. It is not a temporary digestive disturbance. It is a signal that something is consistently wrong inside the gastrointestinal or systemic biology of the dog, and it does not resolve without identifying and addressing that underlying cause.
The most common mistake made with chronic diarrhoea is treating each episode as if it were a fresh acute problem. Another bland diet, another round of probiotics, another wait-and-see. The underlying condition continues undisturbed.
What Is Chronic Diarrhoea in Dogs?
Chronic diarrhoea is defined as loose, frequent, or abnormally formed stools persisting for more than three weeks, or recurring consistently over a longer period with only brief intervals of apparent normalcy. It can be continuous, meaning the dog has never fully returned to normal stools during the period, or intermittent, where loose stools alternate with apparently normal periods.
The distinction from acute diarrhoea is not only temporal. Acute diarrhoea is typically self-limiting and often attributable to a single identifiable event. Chronic diarrhoea reflects a sustained or recurring pathological process within the gastrointestinal tract or as a manifestation of systemic disease. It requires investigation, not repeated symptomatic management.
Why Chronic Diarrhoea Is Serious
Chronic diarrhoea is not simply an inconvenience. Its ongoing consequences accumulate in ways that directly affect a dog’s health and quality of life.
Persistent fluid loss through loose stools produces ongoing low-grade dehydration that, while often not dramatic in presentation, chronically strains kidney function and electrolyte balance. Impaired nutrient absorption from a chronically irritated or inflamed intestinal lining produces progressive nutritional deficits. Protein loss through a damaged mucosal barrier results in declining muscle mass and reduced plasma protein levels. Immune function, dependent on nutritional adequacy, deteriorates. Coat quality declines. Energy levels fall.
A dog that has had chronic diarrhoea for three months has sustained three months of accumulated nutritional deficit, fluid loss, and intestinal damage. The longer it goes without a diagnosis, the more difficult and protracted the recovery.
Symptoms of Chronic Diarrhoea in Dogs
- Persistent loose, watery, or unformed stools lasting more than three weeks
- Increased frequency of defecation, often with urgency
- Progressive weight loss that accumulates despite apparently normal food intake
- Lethargy and reduced physical activity reflecting nutritional depletion
- Poor coat quality, appearing dull, dry, or rough
- Dehydration indicated by dry mucous membranes and reduced skin elasticity
- In some cases, blood or mucus in the stool indicates mucosal involvement
- Reduced appetite or variable food enthusiasm
The combination of weight loss with chronic loose stools is one of the most important clinical patterns to recognise. It indicates that the intestinal lining is failing to absorb nutrients adequately and requires thorough investigation for conditions including EPI, IBD, and other malabsorptive diseases.
Related Videos
▶
▶
▶
▶Causes of Chronic Diarrhoea in Dogs
Primary Gastrointestinal Causes
Inflammatory bowel disease is one of the most common chronic gastrointestinal diagnoses underlying persistent diarrhoea in dogs. The immune-mediated inflammation of the intestinal lining disrupts normal absorption and produces recurring loose stools alongside weight loss and variable appetite. Food allergies and dietary intolerances produce a similar pattern of chronic intestinal irritation sustained by ongoing immune activation against specific dietary proteins.
Chronic infections, including Giardia, Tritrichomonas, and persistent bacterial dysbiosis, can produce diarrhoea that continues beyond the expected acute course. These causes are identified through specific faecal testing and respond to targeted treatment.
Clostridium perfringens-associated diarrhoea in dogs is a specific bacterial cause of recurring large intestinal diarrhoea that is often intermittent, mucoid, and associated with characteristic spore formation on faecal examination. Understanding colitis in dogs in this context helps clarify how bacterial and immune-mediated large intestinal inflammation produce overlapping symptom patterns requiring differentiation.
Secondary and Systemic Causes
Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency produces voluminous, pale, greasy diarrhoea alongside significant weight loss and increased appetite, as the absence of digestive enzymes means food passes largely undigested. Liver disease, kidney disease, and hormonal disorders, including hypothyroidism and hypoadrenocorticism, can all produce gastrointestinal consequences, including chronic diarrhoea as part of their broader systemic effects.
Other Contributing Factors
Gut microbiome imbalance, whether following antibiotic exposure, illness, or chronic dietary inconsistency, can sustain a pattern of loose stools that does not resolve without specific microbiome restoration. Chronic stress and anxiety have documented effects on gastrointestinal motility and mucosal function that can produce ongoing large intestinal symptoms.
How Veterinarians Diagnose Chronic Diarrhoea in Dogs
Diagnosis of chronic diarrhoea requires a systematic approach because the symptom is non-specific and the list of potential causes is extensive.
Physical examination establishes the dog’s overall nutritional and hydration status, identifies abdominal discomfort or abnormalities, and assesses body condition. The duration and character of the diarrhoea, including whether it is small bowel in pattern (large volume, less frequent, weight loss prominent) or large bowel in pattern (small volume, frequent, mucus and blood more common), guides the initial diagnostic direction.
Blood tests, including a complete blood count, biochemistry panel, TLI for EPI assessment, and cobalamin and folate levels, provide broad diagnostic information about organ function, nutritional status, and pancreatic function. Faecal examination is essential and should include specific testing for Giardia and other parasites beyond routine microscopy. Abdominal ultrasound assesses intestinal wall thickness, layering, and the structural integrity of the gastrointestinal tract. Endoscopy with biopsy provides histopathological confirmation when IBD or other chronic mucosal disease is suspected.
| Stage | Clinical Presentation | Diagnostic Action |
|---|---|---|
| Early | Occasional loose stools, dog otherwise well | Monitor, faecal testing, dietary trial |
| Persistent | Diarrhoea lasting more than three weeks | Blood tests, full faecal workup, ultrasound |
| Advanced | Weight loss, lethargy, recurring symptoms | Endoscopy and biopsy, TLI, cobalamin levels |
| Severe | Malnutrition, hypoalbuminaemia, weakness | Intensive management, specialist involvement |
Treatment for Chronic Diarrhoea in Dogs
Treatment depends entirely on identifying the underlying cause. There is no universal treatment for chronic diarrhoea. Managing the symptom without the diagnosis produces temporary improvement at best.
Dietary Management (First Line)
A dietary trial using a hydrolysed protein or novel protein diet is the appropriate first-line intervention when food allergy or food-responsive IBD is suspected. The diet must be fed exclusively, without any other protein source, for a minimum of four to eight weeks to assess whether dietary modification alone is sufficient for remission.
During acute exacerbations, a bland, highly digestible diet reduces the current episode. Long-term dietary management for chronic conditions requires a consistently maintained appropriate diet rather than a temporary bland diet.
Medical Treatment
Deworming with appropriate antiparasitic agents addresses identified parasitic causes. Antibiotics treat confirmed bacterial infections and microbiome imbalance contributing to chronic symptoms. Anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive medications, principally corticosteroids, are the primary pharmacological treatment for confirmed immune-mediated IBD that does not respond to dietary modification alone.
Pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy is the definitive treatment when EPI is the identified cause. Treatment of underlying systemic disease, whether hypothyroidism, liver disease, or other organ dysfunction, addresses the systemic driver of the gastrointestinal symptoms.
Supportive Care
Probiotics support restoration of healthy gut microbiome balance and are used as adjunctive treatment across several chronic diarrhoea conditions. Fluid therapy corrects dehydration in dogs with significant ongoing losses. Cobalamin and vitamin supplementation address the nutritional deficits that accumulate in longstanding chronic diarrhoea.
Related Products
Prognosis
The prognosis for chronic diarrhoea depends on the underlying diagnosis and the stage at which it is identified and treated.
Food-responsive disease identified early and managed with appropriate dietary modification carries an excellent prognosis, with many dogs achieving complete and sustained remission. Infectious causes treated promptly resolve well. EPI managed with enzyme replacement produces rapid improvement and good long-term outcomes with consistent treatment.
Immune-mediated IBD requires lifelong management and carries a variable prognosis depending on severity. Cases with significant protein-losing enteropathy or advanced nutritional compromise at diagnosis carry a more guarded prognosis but can still achieve meaningful improvement with appropriate intensive management.
The consistent pattern is that earlier diagnosis and treatment produce better and faster outcomes. The accumulated nutritional and intestinal damage from months of undiagnosed chronic diarrhoea takes time to reverse.
Complications of Chronic Diarrhoea in Dogs
Severe dehydration and electrolyte imbalance from sustained fluid losses affect organ function and cardiac rhythm. Protein-losing enteropathy produces hypoalbuminaemia that causes oedema, ascites, and impaired immune function. Progressive malnutrition from chronic malabsorption reduces muscle mass, impairs wound healing, and weakens immune defence against secondary infection. Cobalamin deficiency, developing secondary to chronic small intestinal disease, compounds the primary malabsorption with independent neurological and immune consequences.
Why Chronic Diarrhoea Is Often Ignored
Chronic diarrhoea is one of the most consistently undertreated conditions in dogs presented to general veterinary practice, because each episode looks manageable on its own.
A pet parent who has managed three separate bouts of loose stools over two months with a bland diet and probiotics has not managed chronic diarrhoea. They have managed three episodes of the same ongoing problem without identifying the cause. The temporary improvements produced by each dietary intervention create a misleading impression that the situation is under control when the underlying disease has been progressing undisturbed throughout.
The key clinical indicator that demands investigation rather than another symptomatic management course is duration and recurrence. Diarrhoea that has been a recurring pattern over months, regardless of brief improvement intervals, is chronic. For a comprehensive overview of the full range of diarrhoea presentations and their management, our guide to diarrhoea in dogs provides useful foundational context.
When to See a Veterinarian
Contact your veterinarian promptly if your dog shows any of the following:
- Loose stools persisting for more than two to three weeks without full resolution
- Any progressive weight loss alongside recurring digestive symptoms
- Blood or significant mucus in the stool on more than one occasion
- Vomiting alongside the chronic diarrhoea
- Lethargy, weakness, or visible deterioration in overall condition
- A recurring pattern of loose stools over months, even with apparent improvement intervals
Do not continue managing recurring diarrhoea with a bland diet and symptomatic treatment indefinitely. A pattern of recurrence over weeks to months requires a diagnosis, not another supportive care course.
Prevention and Management
Maintain a consistent, appropriate diet and introduce any dietary changes gradually over seven to ten days. Abrupt dietary changes are one of the most common preventable triggers for both acute and recurring diarrhoea. Avoid feeding table scraps, high-fat treats, and food the dog is not accustomed to.
Maintain a current parasite control programme. Regular faecal testing at annual veterinary health checks identifies subclinical parasitic infections before they produce significant clinical disease. Schedule routine veterinary examinations that include assessment of body weight, body condition, and stool quality, as the early indicators of chronic gastrointestinal disease are often subtle and most reliably detected in a systematic clinical review.


















