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Levothyroxine for Dogs and Cats

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Levothyroxine for Dogs and Cats

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Levothyroxine for Dogs and Cats: Hypothyroidism Treatment, Dosing, Monitoring, and What Owners Get Wrong

By Dr Duncan Houston

Hypothyroidism is one of the most common endocrine diseases we see in dogs, and one of the most misunderstood. Many owners expect a dramatic illness, but in reality, most hypothyroid dogs present with subtle, slow changes that are easy to miss or misattribute.

Weight gain, lethargy, skin disease, ear infections, and behavioural changes often develop gradually. By the time the condition is diagnosed, it has usually been present for months.

Levothyroxine, commonly known as Thyro-tabs®, is the standard treatment. It is highly effective when used correctly, but success depends on more than just giving a tablet. Diagnosis, dosing, consistency, and monitoring all matter.

This guide explains how levothyroxine works, when it should be used, how to dose it properly, what improvement looks like, and where mistakes commonly occur.


Quick Answer

Levothyroxine is a synthetic thyroid hormone used to treat hypothyroidism in dogs and occasionally cats. It replaces missing thyroid hormone, restoring normal metabolism, energy levels, and skin health. Treatment is lifelong and requires consistent dosing and regular blood testing to ensure the dose is correct.


What Is Hypothyroidism?

Hypothyroidism is a condition where the thyroid gland does not produce enough thyroid hormone.

Thyroid hormone controls:

  • metabolism

  • energy production

  • skin and coat health

  • cardiovascular function

  • neurological function

When levels are low, the entire body slows down.


Why Hypothyroidism Is Often Missed

Hypothyroidism rarely presents as an obvious acute illness.

Instead, signs develop gradually:

  • reduced energy

  • weight gain without increased food intake

  • dull coat

  • hair loss

  • recurrent skin or ear infections

  • cold intolerance

  • behavioural changes

Clinical insight

Many owners describe their dog as “just slowing down” or “getting lazy,” when in reality there is an underlying endocrine problem.


What Does Hypothyroidism Look Like?

Mild

  • subtle lethargy

  • mild weight gain

  • slight coat changes

Moderate

  • obvious lethargy

  • recurrent infections

  • hair thinning

  • poor coat quality

Severe

  • marked weight gain

  • widespread hair loss

  • thickened skin

  • chronic infections

  • intolerance to exercise

Advanced or complicated

  • neurological signs

  • cardiovascular changes

  • severe metabolic slowing


How Levothyroxine Works

Levothyroxine is a synthetic version of thyroxine (T4), the main thyroid hormone.

After administration:

  • it is absorbed into the bloodstream

  • converted to active hormone (T3) in tissues

  • restores normal metabolic activity

What this means clinically

It does not stimulate the thyroid gland.
It replaces what the body is no longer producing.


What Improves After Starting Treatment?

Early improvements (1 to 3 weeks)

  • increased energy

  • improved alertness

  • behavioural changes

Intermediate improvements (4 to 8 weeks)

  • gradual weight stabilisation

  • improved activity levels

Long-term improvements (2 to 3 months+)

  • coat regrowth

  • improved skin health

  • reduction in infections

Clinical reality

Skin and coat take the longest to improve. Owners often expect faster changes than are realistic.


When Do Vets Use Levothyroxine?

Levothyroxine is used when hypothyroidism is properly diagnosed.

Important point

It should not be used based on symptoms alone.

Diagnosis usually involves:

  • blood testing

  • thyroid hormone measurement

  • clinical correlation


Euthyroid Sick Syndrome: A Common Trap

This is one of the most important diagnostic pitfalls.

Some sick animals have low thyroid levels temporarily, without true hypothyroidism.

This is called euthyroid sick syndrome.

Key point

These patients do NOT need levothyroxine.

Clinical mistake

Treating these cases as hypothyroid can lead to inappropriate long-term medication.


How Levothyroxine Is Given

Levothyroxine is:

  • given orally

  • usually once or twice daily

Key administration rules

  • give consistently at the same time each day

  • keep dosing consistent relative to feeding

  • ideally give on an empty stomach

Why consistency matters

Absorption varies depending on food and timing. Inconsistent dosing leads to unstable hormone levels.


Lifelong Treatment: Setting Expectations

Hypothyroidism is not reversible in most cases.

This means:

  • treatment is lifelong

  • stopping medication leads to return of symptoms

  • regular monitoring is essential


Monitoring: The Most Important Part of Treatment

Levothyroxine is not a “set and forget” medication.

Blood testing is required to:

  • confirm correct dosing

  • avoid underdosing

  • avoid overdosing

Typical monitoring schedule

  • initial recheck after starting treatment

  • periodic monitoring long term


What Happens If the Dose Is Too Low?

  • persistent lethargy

  • ongoing weight gain

  • poor coat improvement

  • continued skin issues


What Happens If the Dose Is Too High?

This creates signs of hyperthyroidism:

  • increased thirst

  • increased appetite

  • restlessness

  • panting

  • weight loss

  • increased heart rate

Clinical insight

Overdosing is more dangerous than mild underdosing.


Drug Interactions

Certain medications interfere with levothyroxine absorption or activity.

Reduced absorption

  • antacids

  • sucralfate

Hormonal interference

  • corticosteroids

Clinical rule

Separate administration times where needed and monitor response carefully.


Special Considerations

Heart disease

Thyroid hormone increases metabolic demand.

  • may require lower starting dose

  • careful monitoring is essential


Liver and kidney disease

These may affect metabolism of the drug.


Ill patients

Always confirm diagnosis before treatment.


When Is This an Emergency?

Hypothyroidism itself is rarely an emergency.

However, complications or overdosing can be.

Seek veterinary care if:

  • severe lethargy

  • collapse

  • rapid heart rate

  • extreme behavioural changes

  • suspected overdose


What Should You Do If Your Dog Seems Hypothyroid?

  1. do not self-diagnose

  2. do not start medication without testing

  3. get proper bloodwork

  4. confirm diagnosis

  5. follow structured treatment


Common Mistakes

  • diagnosing based on symptoms alone

  • inconsistent dosing

  • giving with food sometimes and not others

  • skipping monitoring

  • stopping medication early

  • overinterpreting mild blood test changes


How to Get the Best Results

  • confirm diagnosis properly

  • give medication consistently

  • monitor regularly

  • adjust dose based on results

  • be patient with coat improvement


FAQ

How quickly will my dog improve?

Energy often improves within weeks. Skin and coat take longer.

Is levothyroxine safe?

Yes, when used correctly and monitored properly.

Can cats take levothyroxine?

Yes, but hypothyroidism is less common in cats.

What is the biggest mistake?

Starting treatment without confirming diagnosis.

Can I stop treatment once my dog improves?

No. Treatment is lifelong.


Final Thoughts

Levothyroxine is one of the most effective and rewarding treatments in veterinary medicine when used correctly. Dogs with true hypothyroidism often show dramatic improvement in quality of life once stabilised.

But success depends on getting the diagnosis right, dosing consistently, and monitoring properly over time.


If you are unsure whether your pet has hypothyroidism, or you need help interpreting test results or adjusting treatment, ASK A VET™ can help guide you through the process with practical veterinary advice tailored to your pet.

狗狗认证
持久耐用
易于清洁
兽医设计与测试
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狗狗认证
持久耐用
易于清洁
兽医设计与测试
冒险准备就绪
质量经过测试,值得信赖