Common Dog Diseases: Symptoms, Prevention, and When to See a Vet
Key Takeaways
- Most common dog diseases follow a familiar pattern of subtle early signs, predictable risk factors, and proven prevention.
- Watch for behavioural changes like hiding, sleeping more, or refusing favourite treats; they often appear before physical symptoms.
- Bloody vomit, pale gums, swollen belly, collapse, or breathing trouble are emergency signs that need same-day vet care.
- WSAVA core vaccines, year-round parasite prevention, dental care, and annual exams prevent most common diseases.
- What Every Dog Owner Should Know About Common Diseases
- How to Spot a Sick Dog Early
- When to Call the Vet Immediately
- The Most Common Infectious Diseases in Dogs
- Parvovirus
- Canine Distemper
- Kennel Cough
- Rabies
- Tick-Borne Diseases (Lyme, Ehrlichia, Babesia)
- The Most Common Non-Infectious Dog Diseases
- Dental Disease
- Ear Infections
- Hip Dysplasia and Joint Problems
- Obesity and Diabetes
- Skin Allergies
- How Common Diseases Differ Between Puppies, Adults, and Seniors
- How to Prevent Common Dog Diseases
- Core and Lifestyle Vaccinations
- Parasite Prevention
- Diet, Exercise, and Regular Vet Visits
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusion
A small change in your dog can mean a lot. A bit less appetite, a sudden cough, or a leg that drags by Sunday morning. Knowing the most common dog diseases and their early signs helps you act early instead of guessing. This guide walks through the diseases most likely to show up over a dog's lifetime, the symptoms to watch for, and how to prevent them. Written for new and seasoned owners alike, with sources from WSAVA, the World Health Organization, and Banfield Pet Hospital.
What Every Dog Owner Should Know About Common Diseases
A "common" dog disease is one that vets see regularly across breeds and regions. Most are preventable, and many are treatable when caught early. There are roughly 900 million dogs worldwide according to Statista, and the same handful of conditions show up again and again in global vet records.
The most common dog diseases include:
- Parvovirus
- Canine distemper
- Kennel cough
- Rabies
- Tick-borne diseases (Lyme, Ehrlichia, Babesia)
- Dental disease
- Ear infections
- Hip dysplasia and joint problems
- Obesity and diabetes
- Skin allergies
How to Spot a Sick Dog Early
Dogs hide pain. The earliest signs are often subtle behaviour shifts: sleeping more, hiding under furniture, refusing favourite treats, or seeming "off" without a clear reason. Track changes over 24 to 48 hours and write down what you see. Watch for:
- Loss of appetite for more than a day
- Vomiting or diarrhoea more than twice in 24 hours
- Excess thirst or urination
- Limping or stiffness
- Coughing, wheezing, or laboured breathing
- New lumps, sores, or bald patches
- Sudden aggression or whimpering when touched
When to Call the Vet Immediately
Some symptoms are not "wait and see." Call your vet or an emergency clinic the same day if you notice:
- Bloody vomit or diarrhoea
- Pale, blue, or yellow gums
- A swollen, hard belly
- Collapse or seizures
- Difficulty breathing
- A pregnant dog who tried to give birth and could not
- Suspected snake bite or poisoning
- Eye trauma or sudden blindness
These signs can move fast, especially in puppies and small breeds.
The Most Common Infectious Diseases in Dogs
These illnesses spread between dogs and, in some cases, to people. Most have effective vaccines.
Parvovirus
Parvo hits puppies hardest. It causes severe vomiting, bloody diarrhoea, and dangerous dehydration. Survival often depends on quick hospitalisation and intravenous fluids. The WSAVA core vaccine series prevents most cases when puppies are vaccinated on schedule.
Canine Distemper
Distemper attacks the respiratory system, gut, and nervous system. Early signs look like a heavy cold (runny nose, fever) and can progress to seizures. Vaccination is highly effective and is part of the core vaccine set worldwide.
Kennel Cough
Kennel cough is the canine equivalent of a chesty cold. Dogs develop a loud, honking cough, often after time at boarding kennels, daycare, or dog shows. Most cases clear in one to three weeks; severe cases need antibiotics. The Bordetella vaccine reduces risk.
Rabies
Rabies is rare in countries with strong vaccination programs but remains a serious global problem. The World Health Organization reports around 59,000 human deaths from rabies each year, with roughly 99 percent caused by dog bites in regions where vaccine coverage is low. Vaccination is legally required in many countries.
Tick-Borne Diseases (Lyme, Ehrlichia, Babesia)
Ticks transmit several illnesses globally. Lyme disease causes fever and joint pain. Ehrlichia and Babesia cause fatigue, anaemia, and weight loss. Year-round tick prevention with chewables, spot-ons, or collars cuts the risk dramatically.
The Most Common Non-Infectious Dog Diseases
These conditions are not contagious but show up in nearly every vet practice.
Dental Disease
According to Banfield Pet Hospital's State of Pet Health report, signs of dental disease are present in roughly 80 percent of dogs by the age of three. Bad breath is the early signal. Daily brushing and yearly cleanings prevent painful tooth loss and protect heart and kidney health.
Ear Infections
Floppy-eared breeds like Cocker Spaniels and Labradors are especially prone. Watch for head shaking, scratching, redness, and a yeasty smell. Most cases respond to medicated drops, but recurring infections need allergy or breed-specific care.
Hip Dysplasia and Joint Problems
Hip dysplasia is a malformed hip joint that leads to arthritis. It is most common in large and giant breeds like Labradors, German Shepherds, Golden Retrievers, and Great Danes. Limping after rest, a "bunny-hopping" gait, and reluctance to climb stairs are early signs. Weight management, joint supplements, and physiotherapy help; severe cases may need surgery.
Obesity and Diabetes
Excess weight strains joints, the heart, and the pancreas. Type 2 diabetes is more common in older, overweight dogs. Use a body condition score chart, measure food rather than free-feed, and keep daily walks consistent.
Skin Allergies
Itchy ears, paws, or belly are usually allergy signs (food, fleas, or environment). Persistent scratching can lead to infections. Modern vet medicines and allergy testing help most dogs live comfortably.
How Common Diseases Differ Between Puppies, Adults, and Seniors
Risk shifts with age:
- Puppies (under 1 year): parvovirus, distemper, kennel cough, parasites. The vaccination schedule is critical.
- Adults (1 to 7 years): tick-borne disease, dental disease, weight gain, allergies, ear infections.
- Seniors (7+ years): arthritis, kidney disease, heart disease, cancer, vision and hearing loss.
A senior dog's first sign of trouble is often "slowing down." Annual or twice-yearly check-ups catch problems before they become emergencies.
How to Prevent Common Dog Diseases
Most common dog diseases are preventable with a simple, consistent routine.
Core and Lifestyle Vaccinations
WSAVA recommends core vaccines for every dog: distemper, adenovirus, parvovirus, and rabies in endemic regions. Lifestyle vaccines like Bordetella, leptospirosis, and Lyme depend on where you live and what your dog does. Keep a written vaccine record.
Parasite Prevention
Year-round protection against fleas, ticks, heartworm, and intestinal worms is the new global standard. The Companion Animal Parasite Council advises monthly prevention even in cooler regions because climate shifts have widened parasite seasons.
Diet, Exercise, and Regular Vet Visits
Feed a complete, age-appropriate diet. Aim for 30 to 60 minutes of daily activity (less for short-nosed breeds in heat). Book a wellness exam at least once a year, and twice a year for seniors. Vets catch dental disease, lumps, and weight changes that owners often miss.
Frequently Asked Questions
Globally, rabies kills the most dogs in regions without vaccination programs. In countries with high vaccine coverage, parvovirus is the deadliest threat to unvaccinated puppies. Cancer is the leading cause of death in older dogs.
Yes, some. These are called zoonotic diseases. Rabies, ringworm, leptospirosis, and certain parasites can pass between dogs and people. Wash your hands after handling waste, keep your dog's vaccines current, and use parasite prevention to limit risk.
Healthy adult dogs need at least one wellness exam a year. Puppies need several visits in the first year for vaccines and growth checks. Senior dogs (7+ years) benefit from twice-yearly check-ups so subtle changes get caught early.
Yes, for the vast majority of dogs. Mild reactions like sleepiness or slight soreness are common and clear within a day. Serious reactions are rare. Skipping core vaccines exposes your dog and your family to real, preventable risks.
Conclusion
Most common dog diseases follow a familiar pattern: subtle early signs, predictable risk factors, and proven prevention. Knowing what to watch for turns owners into early-detection partners with their vets. Keep vaccines current, run year-round parasite prevention, brush those teeth, and book the annual exam. The earlier you catch something, the easier and cheaper it is to treat.
Save the emergency red-flag list, share it with another dog owner, and book your next vet check-up before you forget.
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