Pain in Dogs Is Subtle, And Chronically Under-Recognised
Dogs do not complain the way humans do. They quieten. They sleep more. They jump on the sofa once instead of twice. They greet you with a wagging tail and a slightly slower walk to the door. A dog can be in significant chronic pain and still be “happy” in the everyday sense — eating, drinking, greeting visitors. This makes pain in dogs one of the most under-recognised welfare issues in companion animal medicine.
Structured pain scoring closes that gap. A repeated, owner-rated assessment captures change that day-to-day observation misses, and a few weeks of repeated scoring shows whether treatment is working. The construct used here is based on the validated Canine Brief Pain Inventory (CBPI) — Brown et al. 2007 — and similar two-section severity-plus-interference instruments. We implement the same construct with original wording while crediting the underlying scientific contribution.
Two Sections – Severity and Interference
Pain Severity Score (PSS)
Four items, each 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst possible pain):
- Worst pain in the last 7 days
- Least pain in the last 7 days
- Average pain in the last 7 days
- Pain right now
The four are averaged to produce the PSS. The variation between worst and least is itself informative — a large spread suggests an episodic / flare-driven pattern; a flat profile suggests steady background pain.
Pain Interference Score (PIS)
Six items, each 0 (no interference) to 10 (complete interference):
- General daily activity
- Enjoyment of life / play
- Ability to rise from rest
- Ability to walk
- Ability to run
- Stairs / climbing
The six are averaged to produce the PIS. The interference score often tells you more than severity alone, because chronic pain at moderate severity can devastate function.
The compound score = (PSS + PIS) / 2, on a 0-10 scale.
The Tiers
| Compound | Tier | Action |
|---|---|---|
| <2 | Mild / well controlled | Continue care; periodic re-assessment |
| 2-4 | Mild-moderate | Introduce or optimise baseline analgesia |
| 4-6 | Moderate | Multimodal pain management is appropriate |
| 6-8 | Marked | Optimise the multimodal stack; active vet input |
| ≥8 | Severe | Same-day vet visit |
What “Multimodal Pain Management” Means
Modern canine pain management is built on the idea that layered, complementary mechanisms work better than any single drug. For chronic pain (mostly osteoarthritis in older dogs):
Foundation
- NSAID — carprofen, meloxicam, firocoxib, or Galliprant. First-line for most chronic OA pain.
- Lean body condition (BCS 4-5) — the Kealy 2002 Purina study showed lean-fed dogs had less OA and lived 1.8 years longer.
- Omega-3 supplementation at therapeutic doses (combined EPA+DHA around 90-100 mg/kg/day).
- Controlled exercise — daily and predictable, not weekend bursts.
Anti-NGF Monoclonal Antibody
- Librela / bedinvetmab — once-monthly subcutaneous injection. RCT-supported. Has transformed OA care for many older dogs. Particularly useful when NSAIDs cannot be used (renal or hepatic concerns) or where additional pain relief is needed beyond NSAID alone.
Neuropathic / Centrally-Sensitised Pain
- Gabapentin or pregabalin — particularly useful for evening/nighttime pain that disrupts sleep.
- Amantadine — NMDA antagonist for centrally-sensitised pain.
Breakthrough Pain
- Tramadol — variable efficacy in dogs; not first-line but useful as breakthrough rescue.
- Buprenorphine — buccal or injectable, useful in clinic settings.
Adjuncts
- Acupuncture — RCT evidence for canine OA.
- Cold laser (LLLT) — emerging evidence for arthritis and post-op pain.
- Physiotherapy / hydrotherapy — strong evidence base.
Environmental
- Non-slip flooring, ramps, orthopaedic bedding, raised feeding — often the highest-impact intervention per pound spent.
The “New Severe Pain” Pattern
A previously stable dog with a sudden severe pain spike is not just a flare — it warrants prompt vet evaluation. The differentials include:
- Pathological fracture (especially in giant / senior dogs: rule out osteosarcoma)
- Intervertebral disc rupture (especially Dachshunds, French Bulldogs, Pekingese)
- Abdominal emergencies (pancreatitis, GDV in deep-chested breeds, peritonitis)
- Acute joint injury (cruciate rupture)
- Otitis externa / media (head pain often missed)
- Dental abscess (almost always under-treated)
The calculator flags marked or severe scores with this warning because escalating analgesia without diagnosing the new cause can mask a serious problem.
Tracking Response to Treatment
Re-score:
- Stable disease: weekly
- New therapy or flare: every 2-3 days
A 30-50% reduction in compound score after a new therapy is a clinically meaningful response — comparable thresholds are used in CBPI-based clinical trials. If a new drug or programme has not produced that within 4-6 weeks, it is reasonable to escalate, substitute or revisit the underlying diagnosis.
Item-level changes are also informative. Restored willingness to play is one of the strongest signals that pain is genuinely controlled — it is often the last item to recover and the first owners notice when treatment is working well.
Why Owner Scores Matter
Veterinary clinicians cannot watch your dog at home. The dog in the consult room is rarely the dog in the kitchen at 3 am or after a long walk on a cold morning. Owner-rated structured scoring captures the home reality, makes it shareable with the vet, and creates the trend data on which good chronic-pain management depends.
Honest Caveats
- Owner-rated scores are inherently subjective. Studies show owners tend to be slightly more optimistic than vets. The trend over multiple scores is more meaningful than any single score.
- This is not a diagnosis. A high score tells you pain exists – it does not identify the cause. Pain workup combines history, examination, imaging and (sometimes) targeted analgesic trial.
- “Stoic” breeds rate lower for the same actual pain. Working breeds (Border Collies, Spaniels, German Shepherds) and high-drive individuals often hide pain better. A low score in a known-stoic dog may understate true pain.
- Acute pain is different from chronic. This tool is best suited to chronic pain (OA, chronic back disease, longstanding dental). For acute or postoperative pain, vets use direct observational scales (Glasgow Composite Pain Scale, Colorado Pain Scale).
Conclusion
Pain in dogs is subtle and chronically under-recognised. The two-section severity-plus-interference construct used here — based on the validated CBPI methodology — gives owners and vets a shared framework for assessing pain and tracking response. Re-score every week (or every 2-3 days during a new treatment), target a 30-50% reduction in compound score as evidence of meaningful response, and use the result to drive an active conversation with your vet about multimodal pain management. Few interventions in dog ownership matter more than getting chronic pain right.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I tell if my dog is in pain?
Dogs hide pain by quietening rather than crying. The early signs are subtle: reduced enthusiasm, less play, slower walks, stiffness after rest, reluctance to jump, restless sleep, slightly subdued mood. A structured score (worst/least/average/now pain, plus interference with activity, play, rising, walking, running and stairs) captures the picture better than memory of good days and bad days. Score above 4/10 on the compound assessment usually warrants active treatment.
What is the CBPI score for dogs?
CBPI (Canine Brief Pain Inventory) is the published owner-completed pain scale developed by Brown et al. 2007. It has two sections – a Pain Severity Score (PSS) averaging 4 items (worst, least, average, current pain in the last week) and a Pain Interference Score (PIS) averaging 6 function items (activity, play, rising, walking, running, stairs). It is the most widely-used owner-rated chronic pain scale in canine medicine. This calculator implements the same construct with original wording.
How is canine chronic pain treated?
Modern multimodal pain management is built on layered, complementary mechanisms: NSAID (carprofen, meloxicam, firocoxib, Galliprant) as first-line; anti-NGF monoclonal antibody (Librela / bedinvetmab) for osteoarthritis – transformative for many older dogs; gabapentin or pregabalin for neuropathic / nighttime pain; amantadine for centrally-sensitised pain; acupuncture and cold laser as adjuncts; lean body condition, omega-3, controlled exercise as foundation; environmental optimisation (non-slip floors, ramps, orthopaedic bedding).
What does a ‘compound pain score’ of 5 mean?
A compound score of 5/10 (average of the Pain Severity Score and Pain Interference Score) indicates MODERATE chronic pain – significant enough to affect quality of life, and warranting active multimodal pain management. At this tier, baseline NSAID + anti-NGF monoclonal antibody (Librela) for arthritis, with optional adjuncts (gabapentin, omega-3, environmental optimisation), is a reasonable starting point in conversation with your vet.
When is dog pain a vet emergency?
Severe pain (compound score around 8 or higher), particularly when sudden in a previously stable dog, is a same-day vet visit. New severe pain can signal: pathological fracture (especially in giant or senior dogs – rule out osteosarcoma), acute intervertebral disc rupture, abdominal emergencies (pancreatitis, GDV in deep-chested breeds, peritonitis), acute joint injury, otitis or dental abscess. Escalating analgesia without diagnosing a new cause can mask a serious problem.
How often should I re-score my dog’s pain?
Weekly during stable chronic pain. Every 2-3 days when starting a new treatment or during a flare. A 30-50% reduction in compound score is a clinically meaningful response – similar thresholds are used in CBPI-based research. Watch item-level changes too: restored willingness to play is often the first sign that pain is genuinely controlled.
References & Further Reading
The dosing ranges and safety information on this page are drawn from the following veterinary references. Always defer to your own veterinarian and the manufacturer’s label for your specific product.
- Brown DC, Boston RC, Coyne JC, Farrar JT. Development and psychometric testing of an instrument designed to measure chronic pain in dogs with osteoarthritis. AJVR, 2007 – the CBPI (PSS + PIS construct).
- Brown DC, Boston RC, Coyne JC, Farrar JT. Ability of the canine brief pain inventory to detect response to treatment in dogs with osteoarthritis. JAVMA, 2008.
- Hielm-Bjorkman AK, Kuusela E, Liman A, et al. Evaluation of methods for assessment of pain associated with chronic osteoarthritis in dogs. JAVMA, 2003 – HCPI.
- Reid J, Nolan AM, Hughes JM, et al. Development of the short-form Glasgow Composite Measure Pain Scale (CMPS-SF) and derivation of an analgesic intervention score. Animal Welfare, 2007.
- WSAVA Global Pain Council. Guidelines for Recognition, Assessment and Treatment of Pain in Dogs and Cats. 2014. wsava.org.
- Lascelles BDX et al. Anti-nerve growth factor monoclonal antibody therapy for canine osteoarthritis. Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 2015 – Librela evidence.
- PuppaDogs. Arthritis & Mobility Score Calculator and Librela Dosage Calculator. puppadogs.com.









