Anal Sac Expression – Most Dogs Don’t Need It
A common misconception is that all dogs need routine anal sac expression. They don’t. Healthy dogs empty their anal sacs naturally with each firm bowel movement. Routine expression in asymptomatic dogs may actually contribute to dysfunction by reducing sphincter tone.
Express only when symptoms are present.
Questions This Calculator Answers
- “How often should I express my dog’s anal glands?” – Most need NO routine; symptom-based PRN only
- “Why does my dog scoot?” – Anal sac discomfort, allergies, parasites, perianal irritation
- “Can I express anal glands at home?” – Possible but not recommended for most owners
- “What causes recurrent anal sac problems?” – Food allergy most common; also atopic, soft stool, obesity
- “Should I add fiber to my dog’s diet?” – Yes if soft stool; pumpkin or psyllium
- “Is anal sac surgery (sacculectomy) safe?” – Yes; <5% fecal incontinence risk
- “What does anal sac cancer look like?” – Firm mass, often unilateral, in older dogs; hypercalcemia
How Anal Sacs Work
Paired structures at 4 and 8 o’clock positions just inside the anus produce strong-smelling secretion (territorial marking, identification).
Normally empty themselves with each bowel movement as firm stool presses against the sacs through the sphincter.
Dysfunction occurs when sacs don’t empty naturally – soft stool, obesity, weak sphincter tone, allergic inflammation, anatomic issues.
Symptoms Suggesting Anal Sac Issues
- Scooting (dragging bottom on floor/carpet)
- Excessive licking of perianal area
- Chasing tail with focus on rear
- Reluctance to sit, painful sitting
- Visible swelling around anus
- Discharge (clear/cloudy normal; pus/blood concerning)
- Strong/putrid smell
Why Routine Expression Is Generally NOT Recommended
This is a controversial topic. Many groomers routinely express anal sacs at every groom, but for asymptomatic dogs:
- Routine expression may DECREASE sphincter tone and contribute to dependence on manual expression
- External expression (groomer-style) is less effective and can cause trauma
- Internal expression is more effective but should be by vet/trained tech
- Healthy dogs empty sacs naturally – intervention not needed
- Express ONLY when symptoms present
Top Causes of Recurrent Issues
1. Food Allergy (Most Common)
Allergic inflammation of anal sac duct causes obstruction.
Treatment: 8-12 week strict elimination diet with novel protein or hydrolyzed prescription.
2. Atopic Dermatitis
Environmental allergies cause perianal inflammation as part of broader atopic pattern.
Treatment: Apoquel, Cytopoint, cyclosporine.
3. Soft Stool
Without firm stool pressure, sacs don’t empty naturally.
Treatment: Identify cause (diet, parasites, IBD); add fiber.
4. Obesity
Excess perianal fat reduces sphincter pressure.
Treatment: Weight loss to BCS 4-5/9 often resolves chronic issues.
5. Low-Fiber Diet
Increase fiber:
- Canned plain pumpkin 1-2 tbsp/10 kg daily
- Psyllium ¼ tsp/5 kg
- Prescription fiber-enriched (Hill’s w/d, Royal Canin GI Fibre Response, Royal Canin Satiety)
6. Sacculitis (Infection)
Bacterial infection causes thickened pus secretion.
Treatment: Vet antibiotic flush + sometimes systemic antibiotics.
7. Abscess
Untreated infection abscesses; ruptures externally producing bloody/pus discharge.
Treatment: Vet drainage + antibiotics.
8. Anal Sac Adenocarcinoma (SENIOR DOGS)
Aggressive cancer that can present as anal sac issue.
Signs:
- Firm mass palpable in anal sac, often unilateral
- Sometimes hypercalcemia causing PU/PD (paraneoplastic, PTHrP-mediated)
- Occasionally tenesmus (straining)
Workup: digital rectal exam, fine needle aspirate, biopsy, ionized calcium + PTHrP, ultrasound for sublumbar lymph node metastasis.
Treatment: sacculectomy + lymph node staging + adjuvant chemotherapy/radiation. Median survival 18-24 months with treatment, 4-6 months without.
Always consider in senior dogs with new/asymmetric anal sac issues.
9. Perianal Fistula
German Shepherd predisposed. Chronic immune-mediated condition with draining tracts around anus.
Treatment: Cyclosporine 5-7 mg/kg q12h treatment of choice; lifelong management often needed.
Predisposed Breeds
- Cocker Spaniel (most affected)
- Miniature Poodle
- Bichon Frise
- Chihuahua
- Basset Hound
- Beagle
- Lhasa Apso
- Shih Tzu
- Bulldog
- Any obese dog
Small breeds more affected than large. Atopic breeds disproportionately represented.
Home Management Strategies
- Firmer stool via diet adjustment
- Increase fiber – pumpkin, psyllium, prescription diet
- Weight management to BCS 4-5/9
- Food allergy trial 8-12 weeks if recurrent
- Atopic dermatitis treatment if part of broader pattern
- Probiotics (FortiFlora, Proviable)
- Omega-3 EPA+DHA 75-100 mg/kg/day
- Hygiene – gentle wiping after BMs in long-haired breeds
When to Consider Sacculectomy
- Chronic recurrent impaction 6-12 months unresponsive to medical management
- Chronic infection recurrent despite antibiotics
- Abscess recurrence multiple episodes
- Fistulas connecting to skin
- Anal sac adenocarcinoma (mandatory)
- Quality of life affected
- Fecal incontinence risk <5% in experienced surgeon hands
- Cost $800-2500
Professional vs Home Expression
| Method | Notes |
|---|---|
| Vet expression | $15-30 USA; standalone or wellness visit; safest |
| Groomer expression | $10-25; external technique typically; OK if symptomatic |
| Home expression | Generally NOT recommended; better delegated |
Conclusion
Most dogs need NO routine anal sac expression. Express only when symptoms present. Recurrent issues almost always have an underlying cause – food allergy is most common; also atopic, soft stool, obesity, low fiber. Addressing the cause is more important than routine expression. Senior dogs with new or asymmetric issues warrant veterinary evaluation to rule out anal sac adenocarcinoma. Sacculectomy is appropriate for chronic recurrent cases unresponsive to medical management.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does my dog need anal gland expression?
MOST DOGS DO NOT need routine anal gland expression. HEALTHY DOGS empty anal sacs naturally with each firm bowel movement – the stool pressing against the sacs through the anal sphincter expresses the contents. ROUTINE EXPRESSION in asymptomatic dogs is generally NOT RECOMMENDED because: 1) It may REDUCE sphincter tone over time; 2) Creates dependence on manual expression; 3) Can cause trauma to delicate tissue; 4) External technique is often ineffective; 5) Healthy dogs simply don’t need it. ONLY EXPRESS IF SYMPTOMS PRESENT: 1) SCOOTING – dragging bottom on floor/carpet; 2) EXCESSIVE LICKING of perianal area; 3) CHASING TAIL with focus on rear; 4) RELUCTANCE TO SIT or painful sitting; 5) VISIBLE SWELLING around anus; 6) DISCHARGE (concerning if bloody, pus, foul-smelling); 7) STRONG/PUTRID smell; 8) ABDOMINAL POSITION change to avoid pressure on rear. HOWEVER, SOME DOGS HAVE CHRONIC RECURRENT ISSUES requiring regular expression – identify and treat the UNDERLYING CAUSE rather than only treating symptoms. COMMON CAUSES of recurrent need: 1) FOOD ALLERGY (most common) – 8-12 week elimination diet trial diagnostic; 2) ATOPIC DERMATITIS – environmental allergies cause perianal inflammation; 3) SOFT STOOL – identify and treat cause; 4) OBESITY – weight loss to BCS 4-5/9; 5) LOW FIBER DIET – add pumpkin 1-2 tbsp/10 kg, psyllium 1/4 tsp/5 kg; 6) ANATOMIC issues – some breeds prone (Cocker, Bichon, Poodle, Chihuahua, Bulldog); 7) INFECTION/SACCULITIS – needs vet treatment; 8) ANAL SAC ADENOCARCINOMA in seniors – aggressive cancer presenting this way. CONSIDER SACCULECTOMY (surgical removal) for chronic recurrent issues unresponsive to medical management – relatively safe procedure with <5% fecal incontinence risk; cures anal sac issues permanently. CONSULT VET if regular expression seems needed – they can identify underlying causes and prevent need for ongoing intervention. Don’t accept routine groomer expression as ‘just what dogs need’ – explore underlying causes first.
Why does my dog scoot?
SCOOTING (dragging bottom across floor/carpet) indicates PERIANAL DISCOMFORT. MOST COMMON CAUSES: 1. ANAL SAC ISSUES (most common) – full/impacted/infected anal sacs; secretion thickened and not expressing naturally; 2. ALLERGIES (atopic or food) – perianal itching from allergic dermatitis; often part of broader atopic pattern including face/feet/ears; 3. PARASITES – tapeworm proglottids visible in feces or near anus (looks like grains of rice); roundworms in young dogs; 4. PERIANAL IRRITATION – bath products, fecal soiling in long-coated dogs, diaper rash type irritation; 5. SOFT STOOL/DIARRHEA – residue around anus causes irritation; 6. PERIANAL DERMATITIS – secondary bacterial or yeast infection; 7. TUMOR – perianal adenoma (intact males), perianal gland tumor, anal sac adenocarcinoma; 8. PERIANAL FISTULA in German Shepherds; 9. CONSTIPATION – straining without producing stool; 10. PROSTATE issues in intact males – referred discomfort. WORKUP STEPS: 1) PHYSICAL EXAM by vet including rectal exam; 2) ANAL SAC palpation/expression – is contents normal? thickened? bloody? infected?; 3) FECAL TEST for parasites including tapeworm; 4) SKIN EXAMINATION for atopic dermatitis pattern; 5) FOOD ELIMINATION TRIAL if no other findings – 8-12 weeks novel protein or hydrolyzed prescription; 6) BLOODWORK if concerned about systemic illness; 7) CT/ULTRASOUND if mass palpated. HOME OBSERVATION before vet: 1) Frequency of scooting; 2) Associated licking; 3) Discharge color/amount/smell; 4) Pain on rear handling; 5) Body condition; 6) Stool quality; 7) Diet review; 8) Any visible parasites; 9) Other symptoms (itching elsewhere, GI signs). EMERGENCY VET if: bloody discharge, severe pain, abscess (firm painful swelling), systemic illness, hyperCALCEMIA signs (PU/PD), severe straining. WHEN HOME MONITORING OK: occasional scooting in otherwise healthy young dog with normal stool can be watched 1-2 weeks; persistent scooting always warrants vet exam to identify cause; routine groomer expression is NOT a cure – identifies cause.
Can I express my dog’s anal glands at home?
POSSIBLE BUT GENERALLY NOT RECOMMENDED for owners. REASONS NOT TO DO IT YOURSELF: 1) DIFFICULT to feel sacs correctly; 2) UNCOMFORTABLE for the dog if done incorrectly; 3) RISK of bleeding, trauma to sphincter; 4) RISK of bite/aggression if causing pain; 5) Doesn’t address UNDERLYING CAUSE; 6) Strong UNPLEASANT SMELL difficult to manage at home; 7) Inexperienced person may not recognize concerning findings; 8) May reduce sphincter tone making problem worse. WHEN HOME EXPRESSION MIGHT BE APPROPRIATE: 1) Trained by vet/groomer to do it; 2) Chronic recurrent dog you can’t afford regular professional care; 3) Emergency only between vet visits; 4) Veterinary supervision/training provided. HOW IT’S DONE – EXTERNAL TECHNIQUE (easier but less effective): 1) Have helper hold and comfort dog; 2) Wear gloves; 3) Lift tail up; 4) Locate sacs at 4 and 8 o’clock positions outside the anus (felt as small swellings); 5) Hold a paper towel/cloth at anus; 6) Place thumb on one side, forefinger on other side of anal opening; 7) Press gently INWARD and UPWARD with both fingers; 8) Sac contents will express outward into paper towel; 9) Repeat for other side; 10) STOP if pain, resistance, or blood. INTERNAL TECHNIQUE (more effective, vet/tech preferred): 1) Sterile glove + lubricant; 2) Index finger inserted into rectum 1-2 inches; 3) Feel each sac at 4 and 8 o’clock through rectal wall; 4) Gently squeeze sac between finger inside rectum and thumb outside; 5) Contents express through duct outward; 6) More complete than external. NORMAL CONTENTS: 1) Clear to brown thick liquid; 2) Strong fishy smell; 3) 1-2 mL per side typically. CONCERNING FINDINGS – VET VISIT: 1) Bloody discharge; 2) Thick yellow/green pus; 3) Foul putrid smell; 4) Firm mass palpable; 5) Pain during exam; 6) Inability to express (impacted sac); 7) Asymmetry between sides; 8) Visible swelling/redness. COSTS – SAVED if doing yourself vs $15-30 vet/$10-25 groomer; but most owners are better off using professionals + addressing underlying cause to reduce need. BETTER APPROACH for chronic issues: identify cause (food allergy trial, weight loss, fiber, atopy treatment) so you DON’T need regular expression.
What causes recurrent anal gland problems in dogs?
RECURRENT ANAL SAC ISSUES = symptom of UNDERLYING CAUSE, not isolated problem. TOP CAUSES in order of frequency: 1. FOOD ALLERGY (most common) – allergic inflammation of anal sac duct causes obstruction; perianal area + ears classic distribution; dogs often have other allergic signs (face/feet/ears); 8-12 WEEK STRICT ELIMINATION DIET diagnostic with novel protein (kangaroo, venison, rabbit) or hydrolyzed prescription (Hill’s z/d, Royal Canin HP, Purina HA); STRICT means strict – no treats, no flavored medications, no exceptions. 2. ATOPIC DERMATITIS – environmental allergies (dust mites, pollens, molds); perianal inflammation as part of broader atopic pattern (FAVRRHO distribution – face, axilla, ventral, rear, regio inguinalis, hocks, otitis); Apoquel, Cytopoint, cyclosporine, ASIT treatments. 3. SOFT STOOL – without firm stool pressure, sacs don’t empty naturally with bowel movements; CAUSES of soft stool: poor diet quality, parasites (Giardia common), IBD, food intolerance, antibiotic-induced; TREATMENT: identify and address cause; increase fiber; prescription GI diet if needed. 4. OBESITY – excess perianal fat physically reduces sphincter pressure; ANY excess weight contributes; WEIGHT LOSS to BCS 4-5/9 often resolves chronic issues; sometimes single most effective intervention. 5. LOW-FIBER DIET – inadequate stool bulk fails to compress sacs adequately; INCREASE FIBER: canned plain pumpkin (NOT pie filling) 1-2 tbsp per 10 kg body weight daily; psyllium husk (unflavored Metamucil) 1/4 tsp per 5 kg; PRESCRIPTION FIBER-ENRICHED diets (Hill’s w/d, Royal Canin GI Fibre Response, Royal Canin Satiety, Purina OM). 6. SACCULITIS (bacterial infection) – inflammation causes thickened pus secretion; vet antibiotic flush + sometimes systemic antibiotics needed; usually responsive but can recur. 7. ABSCESS – untreated infection abscesses; ruptures externally producing bloody/pus discharge; vet drainage + antibiotics. 8. ANAL SAC ADENOCARCINOMA in older dogs – aggressive cancer; firm UNILATERAL mass; sometimes paraneoplastic HYPERCALCEMIA (PU/PD); ALWAYS RULE OUT in seniors with new anal sac issues; sacculectomy + chemotherapy/radiation. 9. PERIANAL FISTULA in German Shepherds (some other breeds rarely) – chronic immune-mediated draining tracts; cyclosporine 5-7 mg/kg q12h treatment of choice. 10. ANATOMIC abnormalities – some breeds prone; rarely correctable surgically. PREDISPOSED BREEDS: Cocker Spaniel (most affected), Mini Poodle, Bichon Frise, Chihuahua, Basset Hound, Beagle, Lhasa Apso, Shih Tzu, Bulldog, OBESE dogs of any breed. WORKUP for recurrent issues: 1) Physical exam + rectal exam by vet; 2) Cytology of anal sac contents if abnormal; 3) Skin examination for atopic pattern; 4) Diet review; 5) BCS assessment; 6) Stool quality assessment; 7) Food elimination trial if recurrent; 8) Bloodwork including ionized calcium if senior; 9) Imaging if mass palpated. ADDRESSING THE CAUSE is more effective than ongoing expression – many dogs become independent of expression once underlying issue resolved.
Should my dog have anal gland surgery?
SACCULECTOMY (ANAL SAC REMOVAL) is appropriate for SPECIFIC INDICATIONS, not routine. WHEN SACCULECTOMY IS WARRANTED: 1. CHRONIC RECURRENT IMPACTION despite 6-12 months of MEDICAL MANAGEMENT (diet, weight loss, fiber, treating allergies); 2. CHRONIC INFECTION/SACCULITIS recurrent despite antibiotic courses; 3. ANAL SAC ABSCESS RECURRENCE (multiple episodes); 4. PERIANAL FISTULAS connecting to skin (especially German Shepherds); 5. ANAL SAC ADENOCARCINOMA – MANDATORY removal + lymph node staging + adjuvant chemotherapy/radiation; 6. QUALITY OF LIFE affected by ongoing issues; 7. UNRESPONSIVE to medical management. WHEN NOT TO DO SACCULECTOMY: 1) Occasional symptoms manageable with diet/lifestyle; 2) Cause identified and treatable (food allergy trial not yet done); 3) First or second episode of impaction; 4) Cosmetic preference only. PROCEDURE: 1) GENERAL ANESTHESIA; 2) Both sacs typically removed (unilateral possible); 3) CLOSED technique – intact sac removed by dissecting around it; less risk of contamination; or OPEN technique – sac opened, lining excised; 4) Both sphincter muscles preserved; 5) Sutures absorbable; 6) Surgery 30-60 minutes typically. RISKS: 1) FECAL INCONTINENCE – <5% risk in experienced surgeon hands; minimal/transient in most cases; permanent rarely; can affect quality of life if severe; 2) WOUND infection (1-5%); 3) PAIN management needed first 1-2 weeks; 4) STRICT activity restriction; 5) E-COLLAR continuous 10-14 days; 6) RARE complications – rectal damage, fistula formation. SURGEON SELECTION: 1) Experienced general practitioner OK for routine cases; 2) BOARD-CERTIFIED SURGEON preferred for ANAL SAC CANCER (complete excision + staging); 3) ASK about complication rates and case volume. RECOVERY: 1) Hospitalization day of surgery; 2) E-COLLAR continuous 10-14 days; 3) Pain medications 7-10 days; 4) Antibiotics 5-7 days; 5) ACTIVITY RESTRICTION 2-3 weeks (no jumping, running, off-leash); 6) SUTURE check at vet 10-14 days; 7) Full healing 2-3 weeks. COST: 1) GENERAL VET typical $800-1500 USA; 2) SPECIALTY/BOARD-CERTIFIED SURGEON $1500-3000; 3) ONCOLOGY case with chemotherapy/radiation $5000-15000+; 4) Pet insurance covers if pre-existing not excluded. PROGNOSIS: EXCELLENT for benign disease – permanent cure for recurrent impaction/infection; resolves chronic discomfort; allows normal life. ANAL SAC ADENOCARCINOMA: median survival 18-24 months with sacculectomy + chemo/radiation; 4-6 months without treatment; aggressive disease but very treatable with prompt intervention. DISCUSSION WITH VET: most appropriate for owners frustrated by chronic recurrent issues requiring frequent intervention; consider for severe cases especially if quality of life affected; not first-line treatment for occasional issues.
Is anal gland cancer in dogs common?
ANAL SAC ADENOCARCINOMA is the MOST COMMON CANCER OF THE PERIANAL REGION in dogs (excluding perianal adenomas which are benign in intact males). EPIDEMIOLOGY: 1) UNCOMMON overall (~2% of dog cancers); 2) Most common in MIDDLE-AGED to SENIOR dogs (median 9-11 years); 3) BREEDS predisposed: ENGLISH COCKER SPANIEL, GERMAN SHEPHERD, MIXED BREEDS, GOLDEN RETRIEVER, CAVALIER KING CHARLES SPANIEL, DACHSHUND; 4) HISTORICALLY thought to be female predominance, now considered no sex predilection; 5) Both spayed and intact affected. PRESENTATION: 1) FIRM MASS palpable on rectal exam (key finding); 2) UNILATERAL most often (one sac affected); 3) ANAL SAC ENLARGEMENT/distortion; 4) DIFFICULTY DEFECATING (tenesmus); 5) PERIANAL pain; 6) ANAL SAC DRAINAGE sometimes; 7) PARANEOPLASTIC HYPERCALCEMIA in 25-50% of cases – presents as PU/PD, lethargy, weakness, anorexia, sometimes with serum calcium 13-18 mg/dL; 8) SUBLUMBAR LYMPH NODE metastasis common at diagnosis (50-70%); 9) LUNG metastasis possible; 10) Most dogs ASYMPTOMATIC initially or appear to have routine anal sac issue. DIAGNOSIS: 1) DIGITAL RECTAL EXAM – palpates mass; 2) FINE NEEDLE ASPIRATE for cytology; 3) BIOPSY confirms; 4) IONIZED CALCIUM + PTHrP for paraneoplastic hypercalcemia workup; 5) ABDOMINAL ULTRASOUND for SUBLUMBAR LYMPH NODE metastasis (often present at diagnosis); 6) THORACIC RADIOGRAPHS or CT for lung metastasis; 7) STAGING WORKUP for treatment planning. STAGING (modified TNM): 1) T1 – mass <2.5 cm; 2) T2 – 2.5-5 cm; 3) T3 – >5 cm or invasion; 4) N0/N1 – no/yes regional lymph nodes; 5) M0/M1 – no/yes distant metastasis. TREATMENT: 1) SURGERY (sacculectomy) for primary tumor; complete excision essential; 2) LYMPH NODE EXTIRPATION (removal) for sublumbar metastasis; 3) ADJUVANT CHEMOTHERAPY – carboplatin, mitoxantrone, or melphalan; 4) RADIATION therapy for incomplete excision or metastasis; 5) PAMIDRONATE or other bisphosphonates for severe hypercalcemia; 6) MULTIMODAL approach standard. PROGNOSIS: VARIES by stage and treatment; 1) SURGERY ALONE – median survival 8-12 months; 2) SURGERY + CHEMOTHERAPY – 18-24 months median; 3) LYMPH NODE METASTASIS treated – 12-18 months; 4) LUNG METASTASIS at diagnosis – 6-12 months; 5) UNTREATED – 4-6 months; 6) LOCAL RECURRENCE common (40-60%); 7) PROGNOSTIC factors: tumor size <5 cm, no metastasis, lower hypercalcemia, complete excision. WHEN TO SUSPECT – any SENIOR DOG with: 1) Firm mass in anal sac (palpate on rectal exam); 2) Unilateral asymmetric anal sac issue; 3) NEW anal sac problems in dog without history; 4) HYPERCALCEMIA on bloodwork with PU/PD; 5) Sublumbar lymph node enlargement on ultrasound. EVERY SENIOR DOG with new anal sac issues warrants rectal exam to check for mass. CONSULT VETERINARY ONCOLOGIST for treatment planning – aggressive disease but treatable with appropriate intervention. EARLY DETECTION dramatically improves outcomes.
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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.
- Hill LN, Smeak DD. Open versus closed sacculectomy for canine anal sac disease – outcomes comparison.
- Pratschke KM. Diagnosis and management of canine anal sac disorders.
- Williams LE et al. Carcinoma of the apocrine glands of the anal sac in dogs – 113 cases. JAVMA 2003.
- Bennett PF et al. Canine anal sac adenocarcinoma – clinical presentation, treatment, outcomes.
- Skorupski KA. Treatment of canine anal sac adenocarcinoma – VCA / Cancer Center protocols.
- Polton GA, Brearley MJ. Clinical stage, therapy, and prognosis in canine anal sac gland carcinoma. JVIM.
- Plumb DC. Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook – cyclosporine dosing for perianal fistula.
- Patterson SB, Boy MG. Pyogranulomatous fistulae of the perianal region (perianal fistula).
- Olivry T et al. International Committee on Allergic Diseases of Animals (ICADA) – food allergy diagnosis.
- Royal Canin GI Fibre Response, Hill’s w/d Multi-Benefit, Purina OM – prescription fiber-enriched diet information.
- Lippert AC, Smith CW. Anal sacculectomy in dogs – surgical technique and outcomes.
- PuppaDogs. Anal Gland & Scooting Workup Calculator, Itch / Allergy Flare Diary, Allergy Elimination Diet Tracker. puppadogs.com.















