Worried your dog is hurting and not sure what’s safe?


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Written by: Alon Landa
Medically reviewed by: Kristy Williams, CVT, CCFT (Specialties: Pet rehabilitation, pain management, photobiomodulation)

Reviewed: [April 2026]
Updated: [April 2026]

This page is part of MedcoVet’s clinical education library on photobiomodulation in veterinary medicine. It is designed to explain safe pain relief for dogs, where medications fit, when human pain relievers are dangerous, how acute and chronic pain differ, and where red light therapy may fit into a broader treatment plan.

Every dog owner dreads seeing their canine companion in discomfort. Whether your dog is recovering from surgery, dealing with an old injury, or slowing down due to arthritis, understanding how to safely manage pain in dogs can make the difference between suffering and quality of life. This guide covers everything from vet-prescribed medications to natural alternatives like red light therapy, giving you a complete toolkit for helping your dog feel better.

For a broader overview of pain in dogs, including how red light therapy fits into a full treatment plan, start with our main pain guide.

Worried your dog is hurting and unsure where to start?

Book a free call to get a clear, vet-backed overview of safe pain relief options.

What Can I Safely Give My Dog for Pain Today?

Only veterinarian-prescribed pain medication is safe for dogs. Human painkillers like ibuprofen, Tylenol (acetaminophen), and naproxen are dangerous for dogs and can cause life threatening reactions, even in small doses.

  • The fastest safe option: Call your regular veterinarian or a 24/7 veterinary clinic to get an approved canine pain med. Commonly prescribed options include carprofen, Galliprant, or meloxicam, all formulated specifically for dogs.
  • Critical warning: Do NOT give human medications like Advil, Motrin, Aleve, Tylenol, or aspirin unless a veterinarian has specifically prescribed them for your dog. Many human pain relievers cause kidney failure, liver failure, and stomach ulcers in dogs. Aspirin and some other medications can also interfere with blood clotting in dogs, increasing the risk of dangerous bleeding. This is why veterinary supervision is essential.
  • Vet-prescribed pain relievers for dogs include:
  • NSAIDs (nonsteroidal anti inflammatory drugs): carprofen, deracoxib, firocoxib, meloxicam, grapiprant (Galliprant)
  • Others: gabapentin, tramadol, opioids (buprenorphine, fentanyl) for further pain releif
  • For long-term relief: MedcoVet Luma is a veterinary-grade, at-home red and near-infrared light therapy device that can be added to your dog’s treatment plan. Start with a free clinician consultation to see if it’s right for your situation.

Before you try anything else, check what’s safe for your dog

Human pain meds can cause real harm. This quick quiz helps you understand when red light therapy is a safe option, and when it’s not.

Gideon

Pain relief for dogs depends on diagnosis, not guesswork

Pain relief for dogs is not one-size-fits-all. The right plan depends on whether your dog is dealing with acute injuries, chronic conditions, nerve pain, post-surgical pain, pain and inflammation, or severe pain requiring urgent care. In veterinary medicine, safe dog pain management starts with proper diagnosis, a physical exam, and when needed, blood tests, imaging, and properly prescribed medications under veterinary guidance.

Understanding Pain in Dogs (Acute vs. Chronic)

Not all pain in dogs is the same. Understanding whether your dog is dealing with acute pain or chronic pain helps determine the right approach to treat pain effectively.

  • Acute pain is sudden and typically results from trauma, surgery, or a specific incident—a torn cruciate ligament, a fresh wound, or a fall. This type of pain usually lasts days to a few weeks and requires immediate intervention to control pain while healing occurs.
  • Chronic pain is ongoing discomfort lasting more than three months. It’s often linked to conditions like osteoarthritis (which affects approximately 20% of dogs over one year old), hip or elbow dysplasia, intervertebral disc disease (IVDD), or long-standing back issues. If you suspect chronic pain in your dog, it is important to have a veterinarian assess and diagnose the condition so they can develop an individualized treatment plan tailored to your dog’s ongoing needs.
  • Why untreated pain matters: Dogs that live with unaddressed pain experience slower healing, muscle loss, behavior changes, anxiety, poor sleep, and reduced mobility. Pain isn’t just uncomfortable—it actively harms your dog’s health.

Pain Type

Goal of Treatment

Timeline

Acute Pain

Rapid relief and protection while healing

Days to weeks

Chronic Pain

Long-term management and quality of life

Ongoing

  • Emergency situations: Any sudden, severe pain—crying out, inability to stand, dragging limbs—requires same-day veterinary care. Don’t wait to see if it improves.

If you want the full condition-level overview of pain in dogs, including when red light therapy helps and when veterinary evaluation should come first, visit our main pain pillar.

Recognizing the Signs Your Dog Is in Pain

Many dogs instinctively hide pain, a survival behavior inherited from their wild ancestors. This means behavior changes are often the first clue that something is wrong.

Behavioral signs to watch for:

  • Restlessness or pacing at night
  • Hiding or unusual clinginess
  • Irritability or growling when touched
  • Changes in sleep patterns or decreased appetite
  • Reluctance to be petted in certain areas

Movement-related signs:

  • Limping or favoring one leg
  • Stiffness when getting up, especially after rest
  • Reluctance to jump into the car or onto furniture
  • Avoiding stairs they previously climbed easily
  • Slowing down on walks or lagging behind

Physical signs:

  • Panting at rest (not related to heat)
  • Trembling or shaking
  • Hunched back or tense abdomen
  • Pinned ears or squinting eyes
  • Excessive licking or chewing at a specific joint or paw

Real-world example: Consider a 9-year-old Labrador who now hesitates before climbing onto the couch, sleeps more during the day, and seems stiff after lying down. These subtle shifts are classic early arthritis clues, easy to dismiss as “just getting older” but worth investigating.

If pain behaviors persist more than 24 hours or worsen, contact your dog’s vet for assessment and a tailored pain plan.

Veterinary Pain Medications for Dogs

Veterinary medicine offers several medication classes for dog pain management, often used in combination to control pain safely while monitoring for adverse reactions. Advances in veterinary science have led to safer and more effective pain management protocols for dogs. Proper monitoring is essential, especially for dogs with existing conditions.

All medications in this section must be prescribed or approved by a veterinarian, with the choice of medication and dosage tailored to your dog’s specific condition, symptoms, and overall health. There’s no safe “one-size-fits-all” approach.

Overview of medication categories:

  • Opioids address short-term severe pain
  • Drugs like gabapentin target nerve pain or chronic conditions

Routine blood tests and proper monitoring are critical for long-term medication use, especially in older dogs or those with kidney disease or compromised liver function.

Medications can also be combined with non-drug therapies like red light therapy to reduce reliance on higher drug doses over time—always under veterinary guidance.

NSAIDs for Dogs (Vet-Approved Anti-Inflammatories)

Nonsteroidal anti inflammatory drugs reduce pain and inflammation in joints, soft tissue, and after surgery by inhibiting enzymes that produce inflammatory compounds. They’re typically prescribed for mild pain to moderate discomfort.

FDA-approved NSAIDs for dogs:

Medication

Common Use

Carprofen (Rimadyl, Vetprofen)

Widely used for osteoarthritis and post-op pain

Deracoxib (Deramaxx)

Often prescribed after orthopedic surgery

Firocoxib (Previcox)

Used for arthritis and soft-tissue pain

Meloxicam (Metacam)

Liquid option, sometimes preferred for smaller dogs

Grapiprant (Galliprant)

Newer class (EP4 antagonist) with different side-effect profile

Common side effects requiring immediate attention:

  • Vomiting or diarrhea
  • Decreased appetite
  • Black or tarry stools
  • Increased thirst or urination

Stop the medication and call your vet immediately if these appear.

Baseline and periodic blood work (every 6–12 months for chronic conditions) helps monitor liver function and kidney health. This is especially important for senior dogs.

Never combine vet NSAIDs with aspirin or another anti inflammatory drugs unless specifically directed by a veterinarian. This dramatically increases the risk of stomach ulcers and serious complications.

Important: Human NSAIDs like ibuprofen and naproxen are NOT the same as veterinary NSAIDs. They metabolize differently in dogs and are dangerous even at low doses.

Opioids and Other Prescription Pain Relievers

Opioids and similar drugs are reserved for moderate to severe pain, often after surgery, trauma, or with advanced cancer. These are effective medications but require careful oversight.

Common opioids used in veterinary practice:

Medication

Typical Use

Morphine, hydromorphone

Hospital-use for acute, severe pain

Fentanyl

Often given as a patch post-surgery for continuous relief

Buprenorphine

Moderate pain, dental or soft-tissue procedures

Butorphanol, codeine

Select cases or combination protocols


Side effects to monitor:

  • Sedation and drowsiness
  • Panting or restlessness
  • Nausea and constipation
  • Behavior changes

Due to controlled-substance regulations, these require careful dosing and veterinary instructions.

Gabapentin is a common add-on for nerve-related conditions like IVDD, chronic spinal issues, or certain arthritis presentations. While used off-label, it’s widely accepted in veterinary practice for managing nerve pain.

Tramadol is used less commonly now due to questions about its effectiveness in dogs. When prescribed, it’s typically part of a multimodal plan rather than a standalone treatment.

Steroids like prednisone sometimes reduce severe inflammation (spinal swelling, immune-mediated disease) but should never be combined with NSAIDs due to high risk of GI bleeding and ulcers.

Medications help. Long-term plans matter.

Many pet parents use red light therapy alongside meds to support healing and reduce flare-ups over time. Learn how to choose a device that actually delivers a therapeutic dose.

Matilda

Why Human Pain Meds Like Tylenol and Advil Are Unsafe for Dogs

Most human over-the-counter pain relievers are dangerous for dogs—even at low doses. What helps you can seriously harm or kill your pet.

Ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin) Dogs lack the enzymes to process ibuprofen safely. Even one pill can cause stomach ulcers, intestinal bleeding, and kidney failure. Larger doses can be fatal.

Naproxen (Aleve) Similar to ibuprofen but with an even longer half-life in dogs, meaning toxic effects last longer. Causes severe gastrointestinal damage and kidney damage.

Acetaminophen (Tylenol) Causes liver failure and damages red blood cells. Small breeds are especially vulnerable. Signs of toxicity include facial swelling, brown-colored gums, and labored breathing.

Aspirin While occasionally prescribed by veterinarians at carefully calculated doses, aspirin causes GI ulcers and bleeding issues in dogs. It’s not a safe DIY option without proper dosage guidance from your vet.

Signs of toxicity to watch for (may appear within hours to days):

  • Vomiting (possibly with blood)
  • Black, tarry stools
  • Lack of appetite
  • Increased thirst and urination
  • Jaundice (yellowing of eyes or gums)
  • Lethargy or collapse

If you’ve already given a human pain med: Contact your vet immediately, a pet poison hotline, or emergency veterinarian right away. Have the exact drug name, strength, amount given, and time available.

There is no “safe at-home dose chart” for human pain pills. All dosing for human pain meds must be prescribed by a veterinarian for your individual dog—giving your dog even a fraction of a human dose can cause severe organ damage.

Safety is First

Red light therapy offers drug-free pain support without stressing the liver or kidneys. See how it works and when it’s appropriate.

Huxley

Natural and At-Home Pain Relief Options (Including Red Light Therapy)

Non-drug therapies can be remarkably effective for chronic pain and are often used alongside appropriate medications to improve comfort and potentially reduce drug doses over time.

Simple home strategies:

  • Controlled rest during flare-ups
  • Non-slip rugs or runners on slick floors
  • Ramps for beds, couches, and vehicles (use a ramp to get into the SUV instead of jumping)
  • Raised food and water bowls to reduce neck strain
  • Orthopedic dog beds with memory foam support
  • Maintaining a healthy weight through portion control

Low-impact exercise options:

  • Short, controlled leash walks
  • Underwater treadmill sessions (with professional guidance)
  • Swimming in warm water (supports joints while building muscle)
  • Physical therapy exercises prescribed by a veterinary rehab specialist

Validated alternative therapies:

  • Acupuncture (studies show 65% pain reduction in hip dysplasia cases)
  • Massage therapy to relieve muscle tension
  • Heat therapy for stiff muscles and joints
  • Joint supplements including glucosamine, chondroitin, omega-3 fatty acids, UCII (type II collagen)
  • Adequan injections for joint disease

Red light therapy (photobiomodulation) stands out as a leading non-invasive, drug-free option for long-term pain control. It’s particularly effective for arthritis, joint pain, IVDD, hip dysplasia, muscle strains, and post-surgical healingwithout the side effects of medications.

If you want results, dosing matters

This short class explains how red and near-infrared light reduce pain, why timing matters, and what most home devices get wrong.

Mizzy

What is PBM and how does it fit into dog pain management?

Photobiomodulation, also called PBM, red light therapy, low-level laser therapy, LED therapy, cold laser, and near-infrared therapy, refers to the same therapeutic category using light energy to influence cellular biology. In veterinary medicine, PBM is used to help manage pain, reduce inflammation, support blood flow, and promote tissue repair. In dogs, it is often used for chronic pain, joint pain, nerve pain, acute injuries, post-surgical healing, and broader dog pain management as part of a multimodal treatment plan.

Red Light Therapy for Dog Pain Relief (How It Works)

Red and near-infrared (NIR) light therapy has been used in human and veterinary medicine for decades to reduce inflammation, relieve pain, and support tissue healing. It’s gaining significant traction as dog owners seek natural supplements to pharmaceutical approaches.

The science in simple terms: Red and NIR light at specific wavelengths (typically 600-1000nm) penetrates the skin and is absorbed by mitochondria—the energy centers of cells. This triggers increased ATP (cellular energy) production and activates anti-inflammatory and pro-healing processes at the cellular level.

Key therapeutic effects:

  • Reduced joint inflammation and swelling
  • Decreased stiffness and improved range of motion
  • Enhanced blood flow to damaged tissues
  • Faster soft-tissue repair
  • Improved mobility and comfort over time

For a deeper review of wavelength selection, dosing logic, safety, tissue depth, and device considerations, see Science of Red Light Therapy.

Why it’s ideal for long-term use: Unlike many medications for dogs, properly used light therapy doesn’t stress the liver function or kidneys. This makes it particularly valuable for senior dogs or those who can’t tolerate higher drug doses due to organ concerns.

Multiple veterinary studies have demonstrated benefits for conditions including osteoarthritis (with 70-90% pain reduction reported in some cases), wound healing, and post-operative recovery.

Light therapy is generally painless—most dogs relax during sessions. Treatment frequency typically starts higher (several times per week) and tapers as the dog improves, with cumulative benefits often lasting months.

For a broader overview of conditions, use cases, and treatment expectations, see Red Light Therapy for Dogs.

MedcoVet Luma: At-Home Vet-Grade Red Light Therapy

MedcoVet Luma is a home-use, veterinary-grade red and near-infrared light therapy system designed specifically for dogs (and cats) with chronic pain and mobility issues. It’s the same technology trusted by 250+ veterinary clinics, now available for convenient at-home treatment.

Key technical features:

  • Uses clinically relevant 635nm (red) and 850nm (near-infrared) wavelengths—the same used in professional veterinary rehab clinics
  • Delivers consistent, therapeutic doses across the treatment area
  • Specialized comb technology allows effective light delivery even through thicker or long coats
  • Portable design for treating joints, muscles, and spine

Conditions Luma addresses:

  • Arthritis (hips, knees, elbows, spine, shoulders, hocks)
  • Joint pain from dysplasia
  • IVDD and back pain
  • Cruciate ligament disease (pre- and post-surgery)
  • Muscle strains and tendon injuries
  • Post-surgical incision healing
  • Otitis and other inflammatory conditions

The MedcoVet care model:

  • Free online clinician consultation to assess your dog’s specific condition
  • Personalized treatment protocol based on diagnosis and history
  • Ongoing support via app and messaging while you treat at home
  • Proper diagnosis guidance to ensure appropriate use

Benefits for pet parents:

  • Non-invasive and drug-free
  • No sedation required
  • Treat at home on your schedule
  • Reduces need for frequent (and expensive) in-clinic laser sessions
  • Natural pain relief without worrying about organ side effects

Let a clinician review your dog’s case


Get a personalized protocol based on your dog’s condition, size, coat, and history. Free. No pressure.

Ella

How to Comfort a Dog in Pain at Home (Day-to-Day Management)

Medications and therapies work best when combined with thoughtful day-to-day management at home. Small adjustments can make a significant difference in your dog’s comfort.

Environment adjustments:

  • Create a quiet, draft-free resting area away from household traffic
  • Use thick, supportive bedding that cushions joints
  • Keep food and water close to minimize painful movement
  • Ensure easy access to potty areas without navigating stairs

Flooring and mobility support:

  • Place non-slip runners or rugs in hallways and on slick surfaces
  • Use yoga mats in areas where your dog stands frequently
  • Install ramps or pet steps for accessing couches, beds, and vehicles
  • Consider a supportive harness or sling for dogs with back leg weakness

Weight management: Even a few extra pounds dramatically strain joints. Work with your dog’s vet to develop a weight-loss plan if needed—measured portions, appropriate calorie intake, and gentle exercise all contribute. Studies consistently show that maintaining healthy weight is one of the most impactful ways to manage chronic pain.

Mental well-being matters too: Just because long hikes are off the table doesn’t mean enrichment should stop. Try some of the following enrichment activities:

  • Scent games and nose work
  • Puzzle feeders and food-dispensing toys
  • Gentle training sessions with low-impact tricks, which are often recommended for dogs recovering from IVDD (intervertebral disc disease)
  • Quality time with calm petting and massage

Keep a pain diary: Track date, activity level, pain signs observed, medications given, and any light therapy sessions. Share this log with your vet or MedcoVet clinician to fine-tune the treatment plan over time.

Ghillie

Want help dialing this in?

Bring your notes, your questions, and your goals. A MedcoVet clinician will help you build a plan you can start right away.

When to SVet (or Emergency Clinic) for a Dog in Pain

While home supports and therapies are valuable, certain signs require prompt veterinary attention. Knowing when to act can save your dog’s life.

Emergency red flags (seek immediate care):

  • Inability to stand or walk
  • Sudden paralysis or dragging legs
  • Continuous crying, screaming, or yelping
  • Swollen or obviously broken limb
  • Severe abdominal pain (tense belly, restlessness, vomiting)
  • Pale mucus membranes
  • Trauma (hit by car, major fall) even if the dog seems “okay”
  • For pets with underlying conditions, such as hypertension, sudden severe symptoms may require immediate veterinary attention.

Urgent signs requiring same-day or next-day care:

  • New or worsening limp
  • Refusal to walk or move
  • Reluctance to jump lasting more than 24 hours
  • Repeated vomiting with signs of pain in the same day
  • Pain not controlled by current pain meds
  • Any adverse reactions to medications

Before traveling to the vet:

  1. Call ahead to alert them you’re coming
  2. Limit your dog’s movement to prevent further injury
  3. Use a sling or towel to support back legs if needed
  4. Avoid manipulating obviously painful areas
  5. Keep your dog calm and comfortable during transport

Bring with you:

  • List of all medications (including natural supplements, CBD, any other medications)
  • Any human meds accidentally given (with exact drug, strength, and time)
  • Your pain diary or home-tracking notes

The combined approach works best: veterinary guidance + properly prescribed medications + non-invasive tools like MedcoVet Luma + thoughtful home care = the best chance at a comfortable, active life for dogs living with acute and chronic pain.


Key Takeaways

  • Only vet-prescribed pain meds are safe for dogs—human pain relievers like ibuprofen and Tylenol can cause kidney failure, liver failure, and death
  • Learn to recognize subtle pain signs since dogs often hide discomfort
  • NSAIDs and opioids serve different purposes and require proper monitoring with regular blood tests
  • Natural options like physical therapy, joint supplements, and red light therapy can reduce medication needs
  • MedcoVet Luma brings veterinary-grade light therapy home, making consistent treatment accessible for chronic conditions
  • Day-to-day management (weight control, environment adjustments, mental enrichment) amplifies the benefits of any pain plan

Your dog depends on you to recognize when something’s wrong and to find safe, effective solutions. Whether you’re managing acute injuries or helping your senior pup stay comfortable through their golden years, the right combination of veterinary care and at-home support makes all the difference.panion’s specific needs.

You don’t have to figure this out alone

If your dog is dealing with pain, there’s a safe next step. Get expert guidance and see if red light therapy fits your dog’s needs.

Clinical summary

Mechanism:
Pain relief for dogs depends on identifying the source of pain and matching treatment to the biology involved. Pain medications may reduce pain and inflammation through anti inflammatory drugs, modulation of nerve signaling, or central pain control. Photobiomodulation may support mitochondrial activity, ATP production, inflammatory signaling, blood flow, and tissue recovery.

Evidence level:
Evidence is strong for appropriately prescribed NSAIDs and other commonly prescribed medications in selected pain states, especially osteoarthritis, post-surgical pain, and inflammatory conditions. Evidence for photobiomodulation is moderate to strong in selected musculoskeletal and inflammatory conditions, particularly osteoarthritis, soft tissue injury, and post-operative recovery. Evidence varies by diagnosis, tissue depth, treatment frequency, and overall treatment plan.

When it works best:
A multimodal approach works best for acute and chronic pain, including joint pain, osteoarthritis, hip dysplasia, soft tissue injury, post-surgical recovery, and some forms of nerve pain. In many dogs, the most effective pain control comes from combining properly prescribed medications, physical therapy, environmental changes, weight management, and non-drug tools such as PBM.

When not to use:
Human pain meds, human pain pills, and many human pain relievers should not be used unless explicitly directed by a veterinarian. Photobiomodulation should not be used casually when proper diagnosis is missing, when severe trauma or fracture is suspected, when major neurologic decline is present, when untreated infection is suspected, or when an unexplored mass or tumor may be present in the treatment area.

Limitations:
Pain relief does not replace diagnosis. Even effective medications can cause adverse reactions, kidney disease complications, liver function concerns, blood clotting issues, stomach ulcers, increased thirst, decreased appetite, or other serious complications if the medication, proper dosage, or proper monitoring are wrong for the dog’s specific condition. PBM is not a replacement for surgery when surgery is indicated, nor for emergency care in a dog with severe pain.

Clinical questions pet owners ask about pain relief for dogs

Only medications for dogs that are properly prescribed or approved by your dog’s vet are considered safe. Human pain meds, many human pain relievers, and other medications from a home medicine cabinet can cause severe organ damage, life threatening reactions, stomach ulcers, kidney failure, or liver failure.

If your dog in pain has severe pain, cannot stand, is crying continuously, is dragging limbs, has acute injuries, or shows collapse, vomiting, or breathing changes, seek help from an emergency veterinarian or veterinary clinic immediately. If signs are milder, contact your dog’s vet as soon as possible for proper diagnosis and veterinary instructions.

A nonsteroidal anti inflammatory drug that is FDA approved or properly prescribed for dogs can be effective for mild pain, joint pain, pain and inflammation, and many chronic conditions. NSAIDs still require proper dosage, blood tests, proper monitoring, and veterinary guidance, especially in dogs with kidney disease, liver disease, or other chronic conditions.

Dogs process drugs differently than humans. Human medications such as ibuprofen, naproxen, and acetaminophen can cause stomach ulcers, blood clotting problems, kidney failure, liver failure, severe organ damage, and serious complications even at low doses. Many human pain relievers are never appropriate medications for dogs.

Not unless it is specifically directed by a veterinarian. Aspirin is one of the human pain meds most likely to create confusion because it is sometimes used in controlled settings, but it can still cause stomach ulcers, bleeding risk, and adverse reactions without veterinary guidance.

Commonly prescribed options include nonsteroidal anti inflammatory drugs, gabapentin for nerve pain, opioids for severe pain, and other medications depending on the diagnosis. The best option depends on whether the goal is to treat pain from acute pain, chronic pain, cancer, surgery, arthritis, or another dog pain problem.

PBM may help relieve pain, reduce inflammation, support blood flow, and improve tissue recovery in selected conditions such as arthritis, joint pain, acute injuries, nerve pain, and post-surgical healing. It is typically used as part of dog pain management rather than as a stand-alone answer for every case.

Because PBM is non-drug and non-invasive, it may be useful in dogs where medication load is a concern. That does not replace veterinary guidance, but it can be valuable in a treatment plan for dogs who need to manage chronic pain while limiting risk from additional pain meds.

See a vet immediately if your dog has severe pain, a broken limb, sudden inability to walk, paralysis, labored breathing, persistent vomiting, collapse, or signs of toxicity after giving your dog any human medication.

A: A multimodal approach combines medications, alternative therapies, environmental adjustments, and physical therapy to effectively manage pain while minimizing side effects.

Temperature therapy is effective, using cold for acute injuries to reduce inflammation and heat for chronic stiffness to soothe muscles. Rest and controlled activity are also important.

Environmental modifications like orthopedic bedding and ramps can significantly improve comfort and mobility for dogs with joint issues.

Veterinarians conduct thorough physical exams and may perform diagnostic tests to determine the underlying cause of pain. They select appropriate medications based on your dog’s specific condition, age, weight, and overall health.

Veterinary clinics are the safest and most reliable place to obtain pain medications specifically formulated for dogs.

Visible signs include pacing, panting, hiding, an arched back, limping, shifting weight, or reluctance to move. Behavioral changes like restlessness, whimpering, growling, or aggression when touched can also indicate pain.

Yes, alternative therapies include acupuncture, laser therapy, chiropractic care, physical therapeutic exercises, underwater treadmill rehabilitation, massage, passive range of motion, neuromuscular stimulation, and therapeutic ultrasound. These can complement or sometimes replace medications.

No. Human pain meds like ibuprofen, acetaminophen, naproxen, and aspirin are toxic to dogs and can cause severe damage to their digestive system, liver, and kidneys within hours. Never give human pain pills to dogs.

Veterinarians commonly prescribe nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as Carprofen (Rimadyl), Meloxicam (Metacam), Firocoxib (Previcox), and Grapiprant (Galliprant). Opioids and drugs like gabapentin are also used for moderate to severe or nerve-related pain.

Yes, joint supplements like Glucosamine, Chondroitin, Sulfate, UCII (type II collagen), and type 1 collagen can support joint health and may reduce reliance on stronger medications.

A multimodal approach combines medications, alternative therapies, environmental adjustments, and physical therapy to effectively manage pain while minimizing side effects.

Proper pain management requires careful medication selection, dosing, and monitoring under veterinary supervision to ensure safety and effectiveness.

Very important. Veterinarians may perform blood tests to monitor liver and kidney function, especially when dogs take NSAIDs long-term, to prevent adverse reactions.

Absolutely. Proper diet and regular low-impact exercise like daily walks or swim therapy reduce strain on joints and improve overall health, aiding pain control.

Seek veterinary care immediately if your dog shows signs like inability to stand, extreme weakness, persistent crying, or aggression when touched.

Sometimes, especially if your dog cannot tolerate medications. Complementary therapies can enhance pain control and improve quality of life but should be used under veterinary guidance.

Only NSAIDs prescribed by a veterinarian are safe. Human NSAIDs like ibuprofen and naproxen are toxic to dogs and must never be given.

Human pain medications can cause severe toxic reactions including stomach ulcers, liver failure, kidney failure, and life-threatening complications even in small amounts.

Very important. Veterinarians may perform blood tests to monitor liver and kidney function, especially when dogs take NSAIDs long-term, to prevent adverse reactions.

Acute pain is sharp and sudden, often due to injury. Chronic pain is ongoing, usually linked to conditions like arthritis, and may cause stiffness or dull aches.

Dogs metabolize drugs differently than humans, so many human medications are unsafe and can cause serious harm or death.

Combine veterinary-prescribed medications with environmental modifications, alternative therapies, proper weight management, and gentle exercise for the best outcomes.

Evidence Citations

  • Photobiomodulation

    By American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery (ASLMS); Anders JJ

    • 2016

    • Journal: American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery

    Abstract: ASLMS guidance states that PBM is used for relief of pain and inflammation, but pain should be diagnosed first to confirm it is from a neuromusculoskeletal condition and to rule out disqualifying conditions or contraindications such as cancerous skin lesions; it also notes pregnant women are not good candidates because fetal effects are unknown.

    One Sentence Outcome:ASLMS guidance supports diagnosis before PBM pain treatment and recommends screening for contraindications such as cancerous lesions and pregnancy.

    Study Parameters:ASLMS public guidance describing PBM indications, diagnostic prerequisites, contraindication screening, pregnancy caution, and parameter considerations.

    Device Parameters: PBM devices using lasers, LEDs, and broadband light in visible and near-infrared spectra.

    Evidence Level:Professional guidance

    Study Type: Professional guidance page

    Outcome Direction: Guidance / contraindication screening

  • Efficacy of 904 nm gallium arsenide low level laser therapy in the management of chronic myofascial pain in the neck: a double-blind and randomize-controlled trial.

    By Gur et al.

    • 2004

    • Journal: Lasers Surg Med

    Abstract: “In active laser group, statistically significant improvements were detected in all outcome measures compared with baseline (P < 0.01) while in the placebo laser group, significant improvements were detected in only pain score at rest at the 1 week later of the end of treatment. The score for self-assessed improvement of pain was significantly different between the active and placebo laser groups (63 vs. 19%) (P < 0.01)."

    One Sentence Outcome:904 nm GaAs LLLT improved chronic myofascial neck pain outcomes versus placebo in a randomized double-blind trial.

    Study Parameters:

    Device Parameters: wavelength: 904 nm

    Evidence Level:Level 1b (RCT)

    Study Type: Human|RCT/DB

    Outcome Direction: Positive

  • Comparison of high-intensity laser therapy and combination of ultrasound treatment and transcutaneous nerve stimulation on cervical pain associated with cervical disc herniation: A randomized trial

    By Yilmaz et al.

    • 2020

    • Journal: Complement Ther Med

    Abstract: “Both of therapeutic modalities demonstrated analgesic efficacy and improved the function in patients affected by CDH after 4 weeks of therapy (total 20 treatment sessions in 5 days a week). Both the HILT plus exercise program and the TENS / US plus exercise program were found to be effective in improving cervical range of motion and quality of life by reducing pain.”

    One Sentence Outcome:High-intensity laser plus exercise improved pain, cervical range of motion, and quality of life in patients with cervical disc herniation.

    Study Parameters:

    Device Parameters:

    Evidence Level:Level 1b (randomized clinical trial)

    Study Type: Human|Comparison trial

    Outcome Direction: Positive

  • Photobiomodulation in human muscle tissue: an advantage in sports performance?

    By Ferraresi C; Huang YY; Hamblin MR

    • 2016

    • Journal: Journal of Biophotonics

    Abstract: Review discussing photobiomodulation in human muscle tissue, including effects on mitochondrial activity, fatigue resistance, exercise performance, recovery, and muscle damage. The paper summarizes mechanisms and clinical sports-performance applications of PBM.

    One Sentence Outcome:The review supports PBM as a potential tool for improving muscle performance and recovery through mitochondrial and anti-inflammatory mechanisms.

    Study Parameters:Review of PBM studies in muscle tissue and sports-performance settings.

    Device Parameters: Red to near-infrared PBM parameters across reviewed studies; wavelengths and doses vary by protocol.

    Evidence Level:Mechanistic / supportive review

    Study Type: Narrative review

    Outcome Direction: Positive / supportive PBM outcome

  • Temperature-controlled 830-nm low-level laser therapy of experimental pressure ulcers

    By Lanzafame RJ; Stadler I; Coleman J; Haerum B; Oskoui P; Whittaker M; Zhang RY

    • 2004

    • Journal: Photomedicine and Laser Surgery

    Abstract: Controlled pressure-ulcer animal study evaluating temperature-controlled 830 nm low-level laser therapy. The study was designed to separate photobiomodulation effects from heating effects during wound healing.

    One Sentence Outcome:Temperature-controlled 830 nm LLLT supported wound-healing effects while helping distinguish PBM from simple heating.

    Study Parameters:Experimental pressure-ulcer model with low-level laser treatment and temperature monitoring/control.

    Device Parameters: 830 nm low-level laser therapy with temperature-controlled experimental setup.

    Evidence Level:Preclinical animal study

    Study Type: Controlled animal study

    Outcome Direction: Positive / supportive PBM outcome

  • Effect of red and near-infrared wavelengths on low-level laser (light) therapy-induced healing of partial-thickness dermal abrasion in mice

    By Gupta A; Dai T; Hamblin MR

    • 2014

    • Journal: Lasers in Medical Science

    Abstract: Controlled mouse study comparing red and near-infrared wavelengths for low-level laser/light therapy-induced healing of partial-thickness dermal abrasions. Wavelengths of 635 nm and 810 nm improved healing, while 730 nm and 980 nm did not show stimulated healing under the tested parameters.

    One Sentence Outcome:Red 635 nm and near-infrared 810 nm improved dermal abrasion healing in mice, while 730 nm and 980 nm did not under the same dose settings.

    Study Parameters:Partial-thickness dermal abrasion mouse model; wounds treated at different wavelengths and compared with control healing.

    Device Parameters: 635, 730, 810, and 980 nm light; constant fluence 4 J/cm² and fluence rate 10 mW/cm².

    Evidence Level:Preclinical animal study

    Study Type: Controlled animal study

    Outcome Direction: Positive / wavelength-dependent

  • A systematic review of low level laser therapy with location-specific doses for pain from chronic joint disorders

    By Bjordal JM; Couppé C; Chow RT; Tunér J; Ljunggren EA

    • 2003

    • Journal: Australian Journal of Physiotherapy

    Abstract: Systematic review evaluating whether low-level laser therapy using location-specific doses reduces pain and improves health status in chronic joint disorders.

    One Sentence Outcome:Location-specific LLLT dosing was associated with reduced pain and improved health status in chronic joint disorders.

    Study Parameters:Systematic review of LLLT trials for chronic joint disorder pain using location-specific dosing criteria.

    Device Parameters: Location-specific LLLT dosing; wavelength and dose varied by included trials.

    Evidence Level:Systematic review

    Study Type: Systematic review

    Outcome Direction: Positive

  • Systematic review of home-use photobiomodulation devices

    By Lima TM et al.

    • 2022

    • Journal:

    Abstract: Systematic review of home-use photobiomodulation devices and their reported effects across outcomes such as pain, wound healing, and mobility, with treatment schedules commonly involving repeated weekly sessions.

    One Sentence Outcome:Home-use PBM studies commonly used repeated weekly sessions and reported benefits across pain, healing, or mobility outcomes.

    Study Parameters:Review of home-use PBM devices and treatment schedules, including repeated short sessions per week.

    Device Parameters: Home-use PBM devices; treatment frequency varied across reviewed studies.

    Evidence Level:Systematic review

    Study Type: Systematic review

    Outcome Direction: Positive/Mixed

  • Efficacy of low-level laser therapy in the management of neck pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised placebo or active-treatment controlled trials

    By Chow RT; Johnson MI; Lopes-Martins RAB; Bjordal JM

    • 2009

    • Journal: The Lancet

    Abstract: Meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials evaluating low-level laser therapy for neck pain, reporting reductions in acute pain and sustained benefit in chronic neck pain after treatment.

    One Sentence Outcome:LLLT reduced neck pain immediately after treatment and showed sustained benefit in chronic neck pain.

    Study Parameters:Systematic review and meta-analysis of LLLT for acute and chronic neck pain.

    Device Parameters: LLLT parameters varied across randomized placebo or active-control trials.

    Evidence Level:Meta-analysis of randomized trials

    Study Type: Systematic review and meta-analysis

    Outcome Direction: Positive

  • Post-surgical photobiomodulation therapy improves outcomes following elective gastropexy in dogs

    By Alves et al.

    • 2024

    • Journal: Lasers in Medical Science

    Abstract: This postoperative canine study found improved recovery outcomes after elective gastropexy with PBMT. No rescue analgesia was needed and pain score differences favored the PBMT group during follow-up, supporting home-relevant recovery use cases.

    One Sentence Outcome:Postoperative PBMT improved recovery outcomes after elective gastropexy in dogs.

    Study Parameters:Dogs undergoing elective gastropexy received postoperative PBMT and were compared on pain-related recovery outcomes.

    Device Parameters: 980 nm PBMT, or 808+980 nm protocol in some dogs; treatment area ~500 cm²; 360 seconds; single postoperative session reported in the database row.

    Evidence Level:Moderate

    Study Type: Prospective veterinary clinical study

    Outcome Direction: Positive

About the Author
Alon Landa is the CEO and co-founder of MedcoVet, a leader in at-home red light therapy for pets. With over 20 years of experience in medical technology and firsthand involvement in developing the Luma, Alon combines deep technical knowledge with a passion for improving pet health. He regularly collaborates with veterinarians and pet parents to advance photobiomodulation (PBM) care at home.
 📍 Based in Boston, MA
📖Read more from Alon here

Kristy Williams Medical Reviewer Headshot

About the Medical Reviewer
Clinical Focus: Surgery, anesthesia, canine fitness, injury prevention, agility
Kristy Williams brings over 30 years of experience to the veterinary field. Her career began in the 1990s, working as a civilian for the Army Veterinary Corps at RAF Feltwell in England, where she first discovered her passion for animal care and supporting their families. Upon returning to the United States, Kristy pursued her education and graduated in 2005 as a certified veterinary technician after passing the national exam. She has since gained extensive experience in both general practice and emergency/referral practices.
Read More about Kristy here.

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