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Dog Coughing Triage Calculator

Suyash Dhoot by Suyash Dhoot
26 May 2026
in Calculator, Wellness
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Dog Coughing Triage Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

Dog Coughing Triage Calculator

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Triage + pattern + RRR monitor
Dog Coughing Triage Calculator
Distinguish kennel cough vs CHF vs trachea vs pneumonia vs bronchitis
This calculator triages dog coughing by character (dry/honking/productive/pink-foam), duration, frequency, triggers, systemic signs, exercise tolerance, and sleep pattern. It distinguishes the key differential patterns – kennel cough (CIRDC), CHF (heart failure), collapsing trachea, pneumonia, chronic bronchitis, laryngeal paralysis, BOAS, reverse sneezing, and foreign body airway obstruction. Includes resting respiratory rate (RRR) home monitoring as the single best early-CHF detection tool.
Triage framework only. Persistent or worsening cough warrants vet evaluation including thoracic radiographs. EMERGENCY signs (pink foam, blue gums, collapse, orthopneic position, sudden airway obstruction) require immediate vet care. Resting respiratory rate (RRR) home monitoring while dog sleeps is the single best early CHF detection – normal <30>40 alert; >60 urgent. NEVER use human cough syrup with acetaminophen, pseudoephedrine, or alcohol – toxic to dogs.

Coughing in Dogs – Pattern Recognition

Coughing has many causes – the pattern tells you the cause. The most useful distinctions are cardiac vs respiratory, acute vs chronic, and systemic signs present or absent.

Cough Pattern Recognition Cheat Sheet

PatternMost Likely Cause
Harsh “goose-honk”Collapsing trachea (small/toy breed)
Hacking + terminal gag/retchKennel cough (CIRDC) – recent exposure
Soft moist + worse at nightCHF (heart failure) – senior with murmur
Productive wet + feverPneumonia
Reverse sneeze (loud snorting inhalation)Pharyngeal reflex – usually benign
Chronic dry + senior small breedChronic bronchitis
Cough + weight loss in older dogNeoplasia (primary lung, metastatic)
Choking / sudden distressForeign body airway
Cough + retching + brachy breedBOAS
Stridor + voice change + senior Lab/GoldenLaryngeal paralysis

EMERGENCY Signs – Go Now

  • Pink frothy foam from mouth/nose = pulmonary edema (CHF)
  • Blue/grey gums or tongue (cyanosis) = hypoxia
  • Collapse / fainting with cough
  • Won’t settle / orthopneic position (elbows out, neck extended)
  • Abdominal effort for breathing
  • RRR >60/min sleeping
  • Sudden airway obstruction (possible foreign body)

Heart Cough vs Lung Cough

FeatureHeart Cough (CHF)Lung Cough
CharacterSoft, moist; pink foam if severeVariable – dry, productive, or honking
Worse at night?YES classicVariable
RRR sleepingElevated (>30)Usually normal
Heart murmurUsually yesOften absent
Response to cough suppressantPoor – needs cardiac medsVariable

Resting Respiratory Rate (RRR) – The Single Best Home Monitor

Count breaths per minute while dog is SLEEPING (chest rise = 1 breath). Count 30 seconds × 2.

RRR SleepingInterpretation
<30/minNormal
30-40Watch closely
40-60Alert – call vet
>60URGENT – same day

For dogs with known heart disease, daily RRR is gold standard early CHF detection.

Kennel Cough (CIRDC)

Most common acute cough. Recent kennel/daycare/dog park/grooming exposure 2-10 days prior, hacking cough sometimes with terminal gag, otherwise healthy dog.

Causes: Bordetella bronchiseptica, parainfluenza, canine influenza, Mycoplasma, herpes, adenovirus 2.

Treatment:

  • Usually self-limiting 1-3 weeks
  • Doxycycline 5-10 mg/kg q12h × 7-10 days for bacterial or complicated cases
  • Honey 1 tsp/10kg can soothe (avoid in dogs <1 year – botulism risk)
  • Isolate from other dogs 2-3 weeks
  • Antitussives (hydrocodone, butorphanol) for severe cough disrupting sleep

Prevention: Bordetella vaccine annually (intranasal, oral, or injectable) for boarding/daycare dogs.

Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)

Classic cough: soft, moist, worse at night, exercise intolerance, elevated RRR.

Predisposed:

  • MMVD (mitral valve disease) – Cavalier (>90% by age 10), Mini Poodle, Dachshund, Chihuahua, Yorkie, Pom
  • DCM (dilated cardiomyopathy) – Doberman, Boxer, GSD, Great Dane, Cocker Spaniel
  • Congenital – PDA, AS, PS

Treatment (CHF Stage C):

  • Pimobendan – inodilator (also stage B2 per EPIC trial – delays CHF onset ~15 months)
  • Furosemide – diuretic
  • ACE inhibitor (enalapril, benazepril)
  • Spironolactone – aldosterone antagonist

EMERGENCY signs: pink frothy foam, severe distress, blue gums, orthopneic position, collapse.

Collapsing Trachea

Signature “goose honk” cough. Small/toy breed (Yorkie, Pomeranian, Chihuahua, Maltese, Toy Poodle).

Triggers: excitement, collar pressure, drinking, hot/humid weather.

Grades: I 25% / II 50% / III 75% / IV 100% lumen reduction.

Treatment:

  • HARNESS (never collar)
  • Weight management critical
  • Cough suppressants (hydrocodone, butorphanol)
  • Bronchodilators (theophylline)
  • Short-term steroids for acute attacks
  • Surgery (stent or extraluminal rings) for severe cases

Pneumonia

Productive wet cough + fever + lethargy + decreased appetite + abnormal lung sounds.

Types:

  • Bacterial (most common – secondary to viral, aspiration, foreign body)
  • Aspiration – vomiting/regurgitation history, megaesophagus, post-anesthesia, brachycephalic; classic right middle lung lobe
  • Fungal – regional (Blastomycosis Great Lakes/Ohio Valley, Coccidiomycosis SW USA, Histoplasmosis river valleys)
  • Viral – distemper in unvaccinated

Diagnosis: thoracic radiographs, sometimes airway lavage culture.

Treatment: antibiotics, oxygen if hypoxic, nebulization + coupage, hospitalization for severe.

Chronic Bronchitis

Small-breed senior; chronic dry cough >2 months; worse with excitement/exercise/cold air.

Treatment:

  • Weight management critical
  • Inhaled or oral steroids (prednisone tapering or fluticasone via spacer)
  • Bronchodilators
  • Cough suppressants symptomatic
  • Avoid triggers (smoke, perfume, dust)

Laryngeal Paralysis

Senior large breed (Lab, Golden, Saint Bernard, Newfoundland, Setter).

Signs: voice change (hoarse bark), exercise intolerance, heat intolerance, stridor (high-pitched inspiratory noise), regurgitation.

Cause: usually idiopathic peripheral neuropathy in older dogs.

Treatment: “Tie-back” surgery (unilateral arytenoid lateralization) for severe cases. Increases aspiration pneumonia risk somewhat.

Reverse Sneezing – Usually Benign

Dramatic inhaled snorting episodes 5-30 seconds. Common in brachycephalic + small breeds.

Triggers: allergens, excitement, drinking quickly, leash tug.

Home management during episode:

  • Gentle throat massage
  • Brief covering of nostrils forces a swallow that breaks the reflex
  • Calm reassurance

Vet if: frequent, distressing, or accompanied by nasal discharge or head shake.

Foreign Body Airway – EMERGENCY

Acute distress, persistent attempts to clear airway, pawing at mouth, possible cyanosis.

Complete obstruction: Heimlich-style abdominal thrust just behind ribs (small dog: hold facing down + thrust upward on back).

Do NOT try to retrieve blindly – may push deeper. Rush to ER.

DO NOT Give Human Cough Meds

Many contain ingredients toxic to dogs:

  • Acetaminophen (paracetamol) – liver failure, methemoglobinemia
  • Pseudoephedrine – cardiac/CNS
  • Antihistamines with decongestants
  • Alcohol-containing formulations

SOME vets prescribe Robitussin DM (dextromethorphan + guaifenesin) at low specific doses – never use without veterinary guidance.

Safe symptom relief: honey 1 tsp/10kg for kennel cough (not for dogs <1 year – botulism).

Conclusion

Cough character + trigger + systemic signs identify cause. Honking = trachea, night cough + senior small breed = CHF, productive + fever = pneumonia, stridor + senior Lab = laryngeal paralysis. RRR home monitoring (sleeping, <30 normal) is the single best early CHF detector. EMERGENCY: pink foam, blue gums, collapse, orthopneic position, sudden airway obstruction. Never use human cough syrup with acetaminophen, pseudoephedrine, or alcohol.

Frequently Asked Questions

My dog is coughing – should I be worried?

DEPENDS ON CHARACTER, DURATION, AND SYSTEMIC SIGNS. NOT EMERGENT IF: 1) Single or occasional episode; 2) Dog acting normal otherwise (eating, drinking, playing, sleeping normally); 3) No respiratory distress; 4) No collapse, fainting, or blue/grey gums; 5) Resting respiratory rate when sleeping <30/min; 6) No pink foam; 7) Mild cough lasting only hours-days; 8) Cough has obvious trigger (drinking too fast, brief excitement). EMERGENCY IF: 1) PINK FROTHY FOAM from mouth/nose (pulmonary edema, CHF); 2) BLUE OR GREY GUMS (cyanosis – hypoxia); 3) COLLAPSE or FAINTING; 4) WON’T SETTLE or assumes orthopneic position (elbows out, neck extended for air); 5) ABDOMINAL EFFORT breathing; 6) RRR >60/min sleeping; 7) SUDDEN AIRWAY OBSTRUCTION (possible foreign body). VET WITHIN 24-48 HOURS IF: persistent cough lasting more than 3-5 days; honking cough (collapsing trachea); productive wet cough + fever (pneumonia); recent kennel/daycare exposure + hacking; soft moist cough worse at night especially in senior small breed (CHF suspect); progressive worsening; weight loss + cough; voice change + cough (laryngeal paralysis senior Lab/Golden); cough + reduced appetite/lethargy. HOME MONITORING – count breathing rate when dog sleeps (chest rises = 1 breath; count 30 sec x2 = per minute); normal <30; >40 alert; >60 urgent. NEVER give human cough syrup with acetaminophen, pseudoephedrine, or alcohol – toxic. HONEY 1 tsp/10kg can soothe kennel cough (not for dogs under 1 year – botulism risk).

What does kennel cough sound like?

CLASSIC KENNEL COUGH (Canine Infectious Respiratory Disease Complex – CIRDC) sound = HACKING COUGH OFTEN ENDING WITH A TERMINAL GAG OR RETCH that owners frequently mistake for vomiting or ‘something stuck in throat.’ Often described as: 1) Honking or hacking sound (different character from collapsing trachea honk); 2) Forceful coughing followed by retching that may produce small amount of foam or mucus; 3) Episodes triggered by excitement, exercise, leash pulling on collar, drinking water; 4) Multiple episodes throughout the day. DIAGNOSTIC FEATURES: 1) RECENT EXPOSURE (2-10 days ago) to kennel, daycare, dog park, grooming salon, training class, multi-dog household; 2) DOG OTHERWISE HEALTHY – eating, drinking, playing normally; 3) NO FEVER usually; 4) NO LETHARGY usually; 5) MAY HAVE mild watery nasal/eye discharge; 6) HIGHLY CONTAGIOUS – other dogs in household often affected within days. COURSE – typically self-limiting 1-3 weeks; ~7-10 days is typical duration; coughing decreases gradually. WHEN TO SEE VET despite likely kennel cough: dog appears ill (lethargy, decreased appetite, fever); cough persists >2-3 weeks; develops productive cough with discolored mucus; concurrent illness or immunocompromised; very young puppy or senior; pregnant; breathing difficulty; weight loss. COMPLICATIONS – bacterial pneumonia secondary infection (especially Bordetella) requires antibiotics; rare progression to severe disease. TREATMENT – usually supportive care only; doxycycline 5-10 mg/kg q12h x 7-10 days for confirmed bacterial or complicated cases; isolation from other dogs 2-3 weeks. PREVENTION – Bordetella vaccine (intranasal works fast 4-7 days, oral, or injectable) for at-risk dogs; usually annual.

Why does my dog cough at night?

NIGHT-TIME COUGH IS CLASSIC FOR CHF (CONGESTIVE HEART FAILURE) – one of the most useful clinical clues. MECHANISM – when dog lies down, blood redistributes to lungs from venous reservoir; in dogs with heart disease and left-sided failure, fluid accumulates in lungs (pulmonary edema), causing cough; coughing wakens dog; often worse with prolonged recumbency. CHARACTER of CHF cough – soft, moist, sometimes with pink frothy material in severe cases. PREDISPOSED to CHF – senior small breeds (Cavalier King Charles Spaniel >90% MMVD by age 10, Mini Poodle, Chihuahua, Yorkie, Pomeranian, Dachshund, Maltese) with mitral valve disease (MMVD); large breeds (Doberman, Boxer, Great Dane, GSD, Cocker Spaniel) with DCM. OTHER CAUSES of night cough: 1) COLLAPSING TRACHEA – more often triggered by excitement/exercise but can worsen at night; 2) CHRONIC BRONCHITIS – cough patterns variable; 3) ALLERGIES – especially with bedding dust mites; 4) GERD/aspiration in dogs with megaesophagus or BOAS; 5) ASTHMA-LIKE syndrome (less common in dogs than cats). KEY HOME ASSESSMENT – RESTING RESPIRATORY RATE while dog sleeping: normal <30/min; >40 alert; >60 urgent. Count 30 seconds x2; chest rise = 1 breath. For dog with known heart disease, daily RRR tracking is gold standard early CHF detection. CALL VET if: night cough new in senior dog with murmur; RRR persistently elevated; concurrent exercise intolerance; weight loss; lethargy; pink foam EMERGENCY. EARLY DIAGNOSIS allows pimobendan therapy at MMVD Stage B2 to delay CHF onset by ~15 months (EPIC trial evidence).

What is a collapsing trachea in dogs?

COLLAPSING TRACHEA = progressive flattening of the windpipe due to weakened cartilage rings, causing characteristic ‘GOOSE HONK’ cough. ANATOMY – normal trachea is a tube held open by C-shaped cartilage rings; in collapsing trachea, the cartilage softens and the dorsal membrane stretches/sags, causing airway narrowing especially during inspiration. PREDISPOSED BREEDS – small and toy breeds especially: YORKSHIRE TERRIER (most common), POMERANIAN, CHIHUAHUA, MALTESE, TOY POODLE, MINIATURE PINSCHER. Often middle-aged to senior; obesity worsens dramatically. CARDINAL SIGN – HARSH HONKING COUGH (described as ‘goose-honking’) triggered by: excitement, pressure on collar, drinking water quickly, hot/humid weather, eating. GRADES – I 25% lumen reduction (often subclinical); II 50% (mild signs); III 75% (clinical signs prominent); IV 100% (severe, may include cyanosis with episodes). DIAGNOSIS – clinical signs + fluoroscopy (dynamic imaging during breathing cycle) ideal; static radiographs may miss subtle cases. TREATMENT: 1. HARNESS instead of collar (NEVER use collar – direct pressure on trachea); 2. WEIGHT MANAGEMENT critical (single most important intervention); 3. COUGH SUPPRESSANTS – hydrocodone 0.25 mg/kg q8-12h, butorphanol 0.05-0.1 mg/kg q6-12h; 4. BRONCHODILATORS – theophylline 9 mg/kg q12h, terbutaline; 5. SHORT-TERM STEROIDS during acute attacks (anti-inflammatory); 6. ANXIOLYTICS for stress-triggered episodes; 7. AVOID heat/humidity; air conditioning helps; 8. SURGERY for severe (Grade III-IV not responding to medical): tracheal stent (less invasive but failure rate ~20%), extraluminal prosthetic rings (more invasive but better long-term). LIFESTYLE – calm environment, avoid stressors, no smoke exposure, weight maintenance, gentle exercise in cool weather only. MANY DOGS LIVE WELL with medical management when properly maintained.

My dog is coughing up white foam – what does it mean?

WHITE FOAM coughed up in dogs has SEVERAL POTENTIAL CAUSES requiring evaluation of overall presentation: 1. KENNEL COUGH (CIRDC) – hacking cough with terminal retching often produces small amount of white foam or mucus; mistaken by owners for ‘vomiting’ when actually post-coughing gag; usually otherwise healthy dog, recent exposure, self-limiting; 2. CHRONIC BRONCHITIS – small breed seniors, chronic dry-to-mildly-productive cough may bring up small amounts of clear/white phlegm; 3. NAUSEA / REFLUX – bilious vomiting (yellow) more common but white foam possible especially on empty stomach; differentiate vomit (abdominal heaving) from cough+retch (chest based); 4. EARLY CHF can produce white foam progressing to PINK FOAM (life-threatening pulmonary edema EMERGENCY); 5. INFLAMMATORY AIRWAY DISEASE – eosinophilic bronchopneumopathy, asthma-like disease; 6. NEOPLASIA – lung tumors, lymphoma. CRITICAL DISTINCTIONS: WHITE/CLEAR FOAM usually benign causes (kennel cough, bronchitis, mild irritation); PINK OR RED-TINGED FOAM = PULMONARY EDEMA = EMERGENCY (often CHF, also smoke inhalation, electrical injury, ARDS); BLOOD-STREAKED foam = hemorrhage in airways (pneumonia, neoplasia, foreign body, trauma); THICK YELLOW/GREEN = bacterial infection (pneumonia). ASSESS: 1) Is dog acting normally otherwise? 2) Recent exposure to other dogs? 3) Color of foam (clear/white vs pink vs blood-tinged)? 4) Resting respiratory rate while sleeping (count breaths/min); 5) Gum color (normal pink vs pale or blue); 6) Exercise tolerance changed? VET IF: persistent (>3-5 days); foam color change; systemic signs (lethargy, decreased appetite, fever); respiratory distress; RRR >40/min sleeping; senior dog with murmur. EMERGENCY IF: pink foam, blue gums, collapse, orthopneic position. HOME APPROACH for likely benign cause: rest, hydration, avoid stressors, gentle exercise, vet phone consult for symptom progression.

Can I give my dog cough medicine?

MOST HUMAN COUGH MEDICATIONS ARE NOT SAFE FOR DOGS. DANGEROUS INGREDIENTS in human cough/cold meds that are TOXIC to dogs: 1. ACETAMINOPHEN/PARACETAMOL (Tylenol, in many combination products) – LIVER FAILURE, METHEMOGLOBINEMIA – especially toxic to dogs; 2. PSEUDOEPHEDRINE/PHENYLEPHRINE (decongestants) – cardiac arrhythmia, hypertension, CNS hyperexcitability, seizures, even death; 3. CAFFEINE – tachycardia, tremors, seizures; 4. ALCOHOL (in some liquid formulations) – intoxication, GI upset; 5. XYLITOL (sweetener in some sugar-free products) – hypoglycemia, liver failure; 6. ASPIRIN combinations – narrow safety margin in dogs; 7. ANTIHISTAMINES with cough suppressants – some sedating combinations not appropriate without veterinary direction. ROBITUSSIN DM (dextromethorphan 15 mg + guaifenesin 100 mg per 5mL, NO acetaminophen/pseudoephedrine/alcohol) – sometimes prescribed by vets at low doses (1 mg dextromethorphan/kg q6-8h MAX) for non-productive cough; ALWAYS under vet guidance only. SAFE SYMPTOM RELIEF: 1. HONEY 1 tsp per 10 kg (avoid in dogs under 1 year – botulism risk) – coats throat, soothes; 2. HUMIDIFIER or steamy bathroom can help; 3. ELIMINATE smoke, perfume, dust irritants; 4. WATER access generously; 5. REST – limit exercise during recovery; 6. HARNESS not collar for collapsing trachea. VETERINARY PRESCRIPTION OPTIONS FOR COUGH: 1. HYDROCODONE 0.22 mg/kg q6-12h – excellent antitussive but controlled substance; 2. BUTORPHANOL 0.05-0.1 mg/kg q6-12h; 3. ANTIBIOTICS if bacterial (doxycycline 5-10 mg/kg q12h for kennel cough/CIRDC complications); 4. STEROIDS for inflammatory cough (prednisone tapering for chronic bronchitis); 5. BRONCHODILATORS (theophylline) for airway disease; 6. NEBULIZATION with saline or medications for thick secretions; 7. CARDIAC MEDS for CHF (pimobendan, furosemide, ACE inhibitor); 8. SPECIFIC TREATMENTS for diagnosed conditions. CALL VET FIRST – identifying CAUSE matters far more than suppressing cough.

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.

  1. Reinero CR et al. ACVIM consensus statement: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in dogs.
  2. Atkins C et al. ACVIM consensus statement: Treatment of canine MMVD (myxomatous mitral valve disease). JVIM.
  3. Boswood A et al. The EPIC study – pimobendan in preclinical MMVD. JVIM 2016.
  4. Macintire DK et al. Manual of Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care.
  5. Sumner CM, Rozanski EA. Management of respiratory emergencies in dogs.
  6. Stanley BJ et al. Laryngeal paralysis in dogs – clinical findings and surgical outcomes.
  7. Maggiore AD. Tracheal collapse in dogs – medical and surgical management. Vet Clin North Am Small Anim Pract.
  8. Ettinger SJ, Feldman EC. Textbook of Veterinary Internal Medicine.
  9. Plumb DC. Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook – doxycycline, hydrocodone, butorphanol, pimobendan, furosemide.
  10. Greene CE. Infectious Diseases of the Dog and Cat – kennel cough complex, distemper.
  11. Mayhew PD et al. Brachycephalic obstructive airway syndrome (BOAS) – surgical management.
  12. ASPCA Animal Poison Control – human cough/cold medication toxicity in dogs.
  13. PuppaDogs. Resting Respiratory Rate Calculator, Heart Murmur Grade Interpreter, BOAS Brachycephalic Calculator, MMVD Stage Calculator. puppadogs.com.
Suyash Dhoot
Suyash Dhoot
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