What are the best foods to hide dog pills in?

What are the best foods to hide dog pills in?

What are the best food to hide dog pills in? This is a question likely to be asked by a dog owner who has to give a dog a medical treatment. The success of an oral treatment for a dog depends very much on the dog owner being able to administer the medicine correctly and reliably, but ultimately the dog must swallow the dose. Many dogs will not voluntarily take an oral medication. This is why owners might ask about the best foods to hide dog pills in.

 Many drug molecules and other medicine ingredients have an unpleasant smell or taste. Medicines manufacturers try to help increase the likelihood that a dog will take a medication by manipulating the formulation to mask the taste and so make the product more acceptable to the dog. There are two main ways to do this: adding a flavouring; and including a coating.

  • Tablet formulations for dogs often contain one or two meaty flavours (such as yeast, liver, beef, poultry or fish) to disguise the taste of a drug and to appeal to cats and dogs.

  • Coatings can be used to cover the drug product to mask the taste smell. A coating creates a physical barrier that prevents the drug coming into contact with the taste buds.

But despite the best efforts of companies, some dogs will still not take a pill that is flavoured or coated. In such cases there are several techniques that are recommended to help dose a dog. One of these is finding the best foods to hide dog pills in.

These are some the best foods to hide dog pills in

  • cooked meat

  • banana

  • honey

  • peanut butter (taking care to check that the product is not sweetened with xylitol, which is toxic to dogs)

  • soft cheese

  • tinned fish

However, even though a dog owner might use the best foods to hide dog pills in, a dog may still detect the smell of the medicine and be reluctant to take it, even when mixed with foods they would otherwise readily take.

It is important to tell pet owners whether a medicine can be given with food.

Other strategies when using the best food to hide dog pills in fails.

There are other techniques to try when using the best food to hide dog pills in has failed as a strategy.

  • Use of pilling devices (e.g. pill pocket treats and pet putty).

  • Using the ‘poke-down’ method. This consists of placing a tablet or capsule at the base, or far back, of the animal’s tongue, closing its mouth and repositioning the head and neck to their natural position while massaging the throat or diverting the animal until the dosage form is swallowed. The dosage form can become trapped so this is best done together with a small amount of food or water.

  • Crushing the tablet or opening the capsule and sprinkling the powder or granules on food. Note that crushing tablets and open capsules is an unlicensed (i.e. cascade) use of a licensed product, unless the product information (SPC) states that it is acceptable. It is important that veterinary professionals give advice to dog owners about when it is not OK to crush a tablet or open a capsule.

New developments that help with dosing

Pharmaceutical companies are researching how to create oral formulations that are voluntarily accepted by dogs. If a medication is truly accepted voluntarily by a dog, that will avoid the need to use the various strategies, including finding the best food to hide dog pills in.

Can the claims about acceptability be believed?

There are many oral veterinary products on the market that are flavoured, or are described as chewable or palatable. Veterinary professionals need to understand what the phrases and claims mean.

Founded in 2012, Veterinary Prescriber provides evidence-based, practical and clearly-written information for vets and other veterinary professionals on medicines. We're proud to be wholly independent, which means that the information we provide is impartial and not influenced by commercial interests.

We love making sense of medicines, which means getting to the bottom of what terms like chewable and palatable really mean when pharmaceutical companies use them to describe tablets for dogs. We have a CPD module in the library specifically aimed at demystifying this topic.

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