Dog Not Peeing? Causes and When To Call Your Vet | [site:nam


If your dog can’t urinate (pee), he may have a urinary obstruction (blockage) and should be examined by a veterinarian right away.

This is a medical emergency.

Your dog’s urinary system is made up of the kidneys, which make the urine; the ureters, the tubes that move the urine from kidneys to bladder; and the bladder, which stores the urine and squeezes to get the urine out of the body through the urethra.

Signs Your Dog Can’t Pee

You might notice your dog acting strangely when urinating, making only little dribbles of pee, or straining to urinate without any urine coming out.

Your dog may also try to urinate multiple times, may whine when trying to pee, or may even lick or scratch at his genital region.

Over time, as your dog’s bladder becomes overly full of urine, he may:

How Veterinarians Diagnose Causes of a Dog Not Peeing

If your dog is not peeing, your veterinarian will do a thorough physical examination, where they’ll check your dog’s urinary tract and genitalia for physical signs of disease or pain.

Additionally, your vet may:

  • Palpate (feel) the abdomen to try and figure out if the bladder is distended (enlarged) and painful.

  • Perform a rectal exam to palpate the distal urethra and prostate in male dogs, feeling for any masses, stones, or enlargement. A neurologic exam will be done to check mentation (mental activity), reflexes, and spinal pain or discomfort.

  • Do blood work to figure out the extent of the obstruction, because electrolyte disturbances and kidney values can be affected and may need immediate medical help before any more testing.

  • Recommend a urinalysis to check your dog’s urine. The sample may even be sent to a reference laboratory as a culture and sensitivity looking for evidence of infection.

  • Perform imaging such as X-rays or ultrasound or even cystoscopy (visualization of the urinary tract through a scoping procedure) to rule out stones, cancer, or other causes of obstruction.

In advanced or complicated cases, the veterinarian may refer your dog to a specialist for additional diagnostics such as the cystoscopy or CT/MRI.

Treatment For a Dog That Can’t Pee

Treatment of your dog’s inability to urinate may vary.

Treatment depends on the underlying cause.

Before figuring out a diagnosis, to provide immediate relief and prevent further life-threatening risks, your veterinarian may recommend either a therapeutic cystocentesis (where the urine from the bladder is removed via needle and syringe) or the passage of a urinary catheter, which may need sedation or anesthesia to put in.

To give time for the other treatments to work—and to allow for the pain and inflammation to go down—the urinary catheter may be kept in place for several hours to several days depending on the cause.

Other therapies beyond those related to specific causes may include:

  • IV fluids

  • Pain medications

  • Antibiotics

  • Lifelong dietary changes such as prescription Royal Canin® urinary s/o or renal; Hill’s® c/d, s/d, or k/d; or Purina® NF or UR

  • Treating a urethral obstruction requires a urinary catheter and flushing of the blockage (if possible) back into the bladder to be surgically removed.

  • Alternatively, a urethrotomy (directly cutting into the urethra) or a urethrostomy (creating a new urethral external opening) may be done.

  • Bladder stones, polyps, and some cancers can be surgically removed.

  • Bladder cancer can also be treated with chemotherapy or radiation.

  • Urinary tract infections and crystalluria (crystals in the urine) may be treated with antibiotics and dietary changes.

Dogs with neurologic complications or other conditions listed above may be helped by certain medications like bethanechol, oxybutynin, phenoxybenzamine, or prazosin.

Some dogs may need lifelong manual expression of the bladder (have a pet parent put pressure on the bladder to empty it).

If this is needed, your veterinarian will instruct you on how and when to correctly express your dog’s bladder.

Unfortunately, if the prognosis is poor or there are life-altering complications, humane euthanasia may be recommended.


WRITTEN BY

Michael Kearley, DVM

Veterinarian

Dr. Michael Kearley graduated from the University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine in 2013. He graduated with a certificate in…


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