Why Post-Surgical Monitoring Matters
The first 14 days post-surgery are when most complications occur:
- Incision dehiscence (opening) — typically days 3-7
- Infection — typically days 3-10
- Internal bleeding — within 24-72 hours
- Anaesthetic complications — first 24-48 hours
- Drug reactions — first few days
- Ileus (no GI motility) — first 24-72 hours
Early recognition + early intervention dramatically improves outcomes. This calculator helps you track recovery daily and identifies urgent red flags requiring immediate vet contact.
The Daily Monitoring Categories
1. Incision Appearance
Normal:
- Dry, well-aligned wound edges
- Mild redness right at suture line
- Small amount of clear/serous fluid early (first 1-2 days)
- Mild bruising (especially neuter/spay)
- Slight swelling first 2-3 days
Concerning:
- Increasing redness/swelling after day 3
- Foul smell
- Hot to touch
- Severe pain at site
RED FLAGS (urgent vet):
- Incision opening up (dehiscence)
- Purulent (yellow/green) discharge — infection
- Active bleeding beyond first 24 hours
- Internal swelling (firm lump under skin)
2. Pain Assessment
Based on Glasgow Composite Measure Pain Scale (Short Form) behavioral indicators:
| Pain level | Signs |
|---|---|
| Comfortable | Normal posture, sleeping well, settles when left |
| Mild | Slight reluctance to move, mild restlessness, occasional licking |
| Moderate | Reluctant to walk, hunched posture, occasional whimpering, lip licking |
| Severe | Vocalising, panting, refusing to move, restlessness, distressed |
Severe pain requires same-day vet contact — usually indicates inadequate pain medication or developing complication.
3. Appetite
Normal pattern:
- Day 0: Reduced from anaesthesia
- Day 1: Usually starting to eat
- Days 2-3: Normal eating expected
- Anorexia >48 hours post-op: investigate for complications
4. Elimination
- Urination within 24 hours is critical — no urination = bladder rupture concern post-spay, urinary obstruction, severe dehydration
- First defecation within 24-72 hours typical
- Diarrhoea common from anaesthesia/antibiotics — usually self-limiting
- Straining = constipation or urinary obstruction; needs vet attention
5. Mobility
Expected progression varies enormously by surgery:
- Spay/neuter: nearly normal mobility within 2-3 days
- Orthopedic: weeks of restricted activity
- Amputation: weeks of adaptation
Concerning: refusal to move, severe lameness worsening, increasing pain with movement.
6. E-Collar Use
Critical for incision protection — one tongue stroke can break sutures within seconds.
Wear full time for 10-14 days for most surgeries.
Alternatives if dog hates the rigid cone:
- KONG Cloud Inflatable Collar — much more comfortable; dog can eat/sleep normally
- Recovery suit — covers body (good for abdominal surgery; doesn’t prevent face licking)
- Bite-Not Collar — rigid neck cone alternative
Never remove without supervision.
Red Flags Requiring URGENT Vet Contact
EMERGENCY (Vet or ER Same Day)
- Incision opening up (dehiscence)
- Active bleeding from incision
- Pale gums (white or grey) — internal bleeding or shock
- Seizure post-op
- Severe pain not controlled by prescribed meds
- No urination in 24+ hours
- Severe lethargy / unresponsive
- Bloody urine
Within 24 Hours
- Purulent discharge (yellow/green pus)
- Hot/red incision after day 3
- Vomiting persisting beyond 24 hours
- Anorexia beyond 48 hours
- Fever (warm + lethargic; >39.5°C/103°F)
- Straining to urinate or defecate
Surgery-Specific Recovery Timelines
Spay (Ovariohysterectomy / Ovariectomy)
- Days 0-2: Groggy, reduced appetite, some swelling expected
- Days 3-5: Appetite normalizing
- Days 7-10: Suture/staple removal (if non-dissolving)
- Days 10-14: Continued activity restriction
- Day 14+: Normal activity resumed if healing well
- Total activity restriction: 10-14 days
Neuter (Orchiectomy)
- Similar to spay
- Scrotal swelling can be impressive (golf-ball size not unusual) — usually resolves
- Self-trauma risk very high — e-collar essential
- Days 3-5: Bruising peak; resolving by day 7
Dental Extraction
- Day 0: Soft food only; pain meds critical
- Days 1-3: Soft food continues; possible mild bleeding
- Days 4-7: Gradual return to regular diet
- Days 7-14: Full recovery
- NO chew toys for 14 days post-extraction
Orthopedic Surgery (TPLO/TTA/FHO/THR/Fracture)
- Weeks 1-2: STRICT crate rest; only short toilet breaks on lead
- Weeks 2-4: Gradual increase in short leashed walks
- Weeks 4-8: Progressive exercise plan; no off-lead, no jumping
- Weeks 8-12: Recheck X-rays; off-lead gradually if cleared
- Full recovery: 12-16 weeks
- Hydrotherapy from week 2-3 substantially improves outcomes
Abdominal / GI Surgery
- Days 0-3: Hospital observation common
- Days 3-7: Home recovery with strict rest
- Days 7-14: Suture removal if non-dissolving
- Weeks 2-4: Full healing
- Watch carefully for ileus, peritonitis, leakage
C-Section
- Recovery + puppy care challenge
- Eclampsia risk in lactating bitches (especially toy breeds) 1-3 weeks post-whelping
- Adequate calcium supplementation POST-whelping (NOT pre)
- Watch for: muscle tremors, restlessness, fever, panting (eclampsia)
Prophylactic Gastropexy
- Reduces GDV/bloat risk by ~90% in at-risk breeds
- Standard recovery: 10-14 days
- Often combined with spay/neuter in young at-risk dogs
Amputation
- Days 0-3: Significant adjustment; intensive pain management
- Days 3-7: Gradual mobility return
- Weeks 2-4: Most dogs adapted
- Long-term: Joint care for remaining limbs critical (overuse)
Pain Management Protocols
Multimodal Analgesia
Standard post-op multimodal:
- NSAID (carprofen, meloxicam, robenacoxib, Galliprant) 5-14 days
- Opioid for moderate-severe pain (tramadol, codeine, buprenorphine, methadone) 3-7 days
- Gabapentin for neuropathic component 5-15 mg/kg q8-12h
NSAID Cautions
- ALWAYS WITH FOOD
- Watch for: vomiting, melaena (dark stool), bloody stool, anorexia, lethargy
- Stop and contact vet if GI signs
- NEVER combine with another NSAID or steroid
- Caution in dehydrated dogs, CKD, hepatic disease
E-Collar Compliance
The single most common reason for post-op complications is owners removing the e-collar.
Strategies for compliance:
- Soft inflatable collar (KONG Cloud) — most dogs tolerate well
- Recovery suit for abdominal/back surgery
- Bite-Not Collar — rigid neck restraint
- Booties to soft-pad post-orthopedic foot use
- Bitter sprays (Bitter Apple, Nasty Habit) on incision area
- Distraction — KONG with frozen food, puzzle toys
- Supervised “no collar” time ONLY for eating with direct supervision
The “just for a few minutes” mindset is how dehiscence and infections happen.
Restricted Activity
Critical for healing — controlled environment essential:
- Leash walks only — no running, no jumping, no off-lead
- Exercise pen or crate during unsupervised times
- No baths or swimming for 10-14 days
- Separate from other pets if rough play
- Multi-dog homes may need physical separation
- Puppy parties / training classes postponed
Monitoring Diary
Track daily:
- Incision photo (visual record of progression)
- Temperature (normal 38-39°C / 100-102°F; >39.5°C/103°F = fever)
- Appetite (% of normal)
- Water intake
- Pain signs
- Mobility
- Toilet output
- Medication times
Photo documentation is invaluable if complications develop — shows the vet how the incision looked yesterday/three days ago.
When To Call Your Vet
Same-Day Vet
- Incision dehiscence (opening)
- Active bleeding
- Pale gums
- Severe pain
- Seizure
- No urination 24+ hours
- Anorexia 48+ hours
- Severe lethargy/unresponsive
Within 24 Hours
- Purulent discharge
- Vomiting persisting
- Fever
- Diarrhoea with blood
- Mobility unexpected decline
- Concerning behavior changes
Routine Recheck
- Suture removal at 10-14 days (if non-dissolving)
- Orthopedic recheck X-rays at 4-8 weeks
- Final clearance before normal activity resumed
Honest Caveats
- Every dog and surgery is different — follow your specific surgeon’s instructions
- This calculator is general guidance — not a substitute for vet consultation
- Early intervention is key — when in doubt, call the vet
- Photo documentation helps remote consultation
- Multimodal pain control is gold standard — under-medicating slows healing
- Recovery time investments are critical — rushing increases complication risk substantially
Conclusion
Post-surgical recovery monitoring is critical because most complications occur in the first 14 days and early intervention dramatically improves outcomes. Track incision, pain, appetite, elimination, mobility, and concerning signs daily. Red flags (dehiscence, purulent discharge, pale gums, severe pain not controlled, seizure, no urination 24h) require immediate vet contact. E-collar use is non-negotiable for 10-14 days — soft inflatable alternatives improve compliance. Activity restriction per surgery type (10-14 days routine, 8-12 weeks orthopedic) is critical for healing. Multimodal pain control (NSAID + opioid + gabapentin) optimizes recovery. Surgery-specific timelines vary enormously — follow your surgeon’s specific discharge instructions. With diligent monitoring and proper care, most dogs recover from surgery without complications and resume their normal lives.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take a dog to recover from surgery?
VARIES BY SURGERY TYPE. SPAY/NEUTER: 10-14 days activity restriction; suture removal day 7-10; full recovery 2 weeks. DENTAL EXTRACTION: 7-14 days; soft food 5-7 days; no chew toys 14 days. MASS REMOVAL: depends on size and location; typically 10-14 days. ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY (TPLO, TTA, FHO, THR, fracture): 8-12 WEEKS for most; weeks 1-2 strict crate rest, weeks 4-8 progressive exercise, full recovery 12-16 weeks. ABDOMINAL/GI SURGERY: 2-4 weeks; hospital observation 1-3 days. C-SECTION: 2 weeks for incision + puppy care challenges. AMPUTATION: 2-4 weeks adaptation. ACTIVITY RESTRICTION timeline is critical – rushing increases complication risk substantially.
What are the warning signs of dog surgery complications?
URGENT RED FLAGS – SAME-DAY VET: (1) INCISION OPENING UP (dehiscence) – emergency surgical re-closure; (2) ACTIVE BLEEDING from incision; (3) PALE GUMS – internal bleeding or shock; (4) SEIZURE post-op; (5) SEVERE PAIN not controlled by prescribed meds; (6) NO URINATION in 24+ hours; (7) SEVERE LETHARGY/unresponsive; (8) BLOODY URINE. WITHIN 24 HOURS: PURULENT DISCHARGE (yellow/green pus); HOT/RED incision after day 3; VOMITING persisting beyond 24h; ANOREXIA beyond 48h; FEVER (warm + lethargic); STRAINING to urinate/defecate. Take PHOTOS of incision daily – invaluable for vet consultation. EARLY INTERVENTION substantially improves outcomes.
How long should my dog wear the cone after surgery?
10-14 DAYS for most surgeries – until incision is fully healed and sutures removed (if non-dissolving). NEVER REMOVE without direct supervision – one tongue stroke can break sutures within seconds. E-COLLAR USE is the SINGLE most important factor preventing dehiscence and infection. ALTERNATIVES if dog hates rigid cone: (1) KONG CLOUD INFLATABLE COLLAR – dog can eat/sleep normally, much more comfortable; (2) RECOVERY SUIT – covers body but doesn’t prevent face licking, good for abdominal surgery; (3) BITE-NOT COLLAR – rigid neck cone alternative. Some dogs need the cone WHEN UNSUPERVISED only with direct watching during eating – but most owners underestimate how quickly licking can damage incision.
Can my dog go up stairs after surgery?
DEPENDS ON SURGERY. SPAY/NEUTER: minimize stairs for 7-10 days – allows but avoid prolonged stair use; small dogs may struggle initially. ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY (TPLO, FHO, hip replacement, fracture): NO STAIRS for 4-8 weeks minimum per surgical protocol; carry small dogs, use sling/harness for large dogs, install ramps as alternative. ABDOMINAL SURGERY: limit stairs first 10-14 days. DENTAL: stairs OK if dog comfortable; pain may make dog reluctant. Always follow your surgeon’s specific instructions – they account for your dog’s specific case. RAMPS PetGear Tri-Fold are alternatives for senior or post-op dogs.
Why is my dog not eating after surgery?
REDUCED APPETITE first 24-48 HOURS post-anaesthesia is NORMAL. Causes – anaesthesia effects, pain medications (especially opioids), stress, mild GI upset. NORMAL PROGRESSION: Day 0 minimal eating; Day 1 should eat some; Day 2-3 normal appetite. CONCERNING if: NOT EATING AT ALL after 48 hours; PROGRESSIVELY DECREASING appetite; OTHER SIGNS present (vomiting, lethargy, fever). INVESTIGATE: pain not controlled (need stronger meds); infection developing; ileus (no GI motility – peritonitis); drug reaction; dehydration. STRATEGIES: warm food slightly, hand feed, offer high-value foods (boiled chicken), wet food easier than dry, small frequent meals. PERSISTENT ANOREXIA after 48h post-op = vet contact REQUIRED.
How much does dog surgery recovery cost?
POST-OP COSTS vary widely. INCLUDED in surgery cost typically: discharge medications (NSAID 5-14 days, antibiotics 7-10 days, sometimes opioid 3-7 days); E-collar; specific aftercare instructions. ADDITIONAL OUT-OF-POCKET: REVISIT for suture removal $30-100; COMPLICATIONS (if any) – dehiscence repair $200-500, infection treatment $100-300; HYDROTHERAPY for orthopedic recovery $40-80 per session over 8-12 weeks $400-1000+; OUT-OF-HOURS EMERGENCY if needed $150-500+. PET INSURANCE if active covers most post-op care. PREVENTION via good post-op compliance (e-collar, restricted activity, medication adherence) avoids most complication costs.
Post-Surgical Recovery Care Essentials
Critical post-op care products – comfortable e-collar alternatives, recovery suits, wound spray, and supportive bedding for safe healing.
Related PuppaDogs Calculators
Continue building your dog’s personalised care plan with these related PuppaDogs calculators:
- Dog Pregnancy / Whelping Due-Date Calculator
- Puppy Weight Predictor (Adult Weight Calculator)
- Heatstroke Risk Calculator for Dogs
- Bloat (GDV) Risk Calculator for Dogs
- Dog Life Expectancy Calculator (Breed, Body Condition, Lifestyle)
- Spay/Neuter Timing Calculator for Dogs (Breed-Specific)
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.
- ACVS American College of Veterinary Surgeons – acvs.org – patient guides.
- 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.
- WSAVA Pain Management Guidelines, 2014.
- ACVAA American College of Veterinary Anesthesia and Analgesia recommendations.
- AAHA Pain Management Guidelines for Dogs and Cats, 2022.
- Mathews K, Kronen PW, Lascelles D, et al. WSAVA Guidelines for recognition, assessment and treatment of pain. JSAP.
- Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook.
- PuppaDogs. Carprofen, Loxicom, Galliprant, Gabapentin, Cephalexin, Clavamox, Doxycycline Calculators. puppadogs.com.















