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Camelina Oil for Dogs: Everything Vets Wish You Knew

Bestie Paws, March 22, 2026
🌿🐢
PMC / NIH • Frontiers Vet Sci • Univ. of Guelph • Health Canada • NRC Verified

An emerging, research-backed plant-based omega-3 supplement β€” peer-reviewed at the University of Guelph, approved by Health Canada as a low-risk veterinary supplement, and now available worldwide. Here is the honest, science-sourced picture.

Β© BestiePaws.com β€” Independently Researched. Science-Sourced. Always in Your Dog’s Corner.
🩺 This Guide Is Educational β€” Always Consult Your Veterinarian First

Camelina oil is a nutritional supplement, not a medication. While it has been studied in peer-reviewed canine nutrition research and is approved by Health Canada as a Low Risk Veterinary Product, it has not been evaluated by the U.S. FDA for specific health claims in dogs. Supplements can interact with existing health conditions and medications. Always discuss any new supplement β€” including camelina oil β€” with your veterinarian before starting, especially if your dog has a bleeding disorder, is pregnant, is nursing, takes blood-thinning medications, or has a diagnosed health condition. If your dog is sick, call your vet first.

πŸ’‘ 10 Key Things Every Dog Owner Should Know About Camelina Oil

Camelina oil is cold-pressed from the seeds of Camelina sativa β€” a drought-tolerant, low-input oilseed plant in the mustard family that has been cultivated in Europe and North America for centuries. What makes it remarkable for modern dog nutrition is its unusually balanced fatty acid profile: more omega-3 than omega-6, a naturally high vitamin E content that prevents rancidity, and a shelf life far superior to fish oil. Two peer-reviewed studies from the University of Guelph β€” published in Animals (2021) and Frontiers in Veterinary Science (2023) β€” have formally established its safety and comparable effectiveness to existing plant-based oils used in canine nutrition. Here is what the science actually shows, and what remains unknown.

  • 1
    What exactly is camelina oil and where does it come from? Camelina oil is cold-pressed from the seeds of Camelina sativa, also called “false flax” or “gold of pleasure” β€” a member of the Brassicaceae (mustard) family. It is primarily grown in the Canadian prairie provinces and northern Europe.
    The University of Guelph safety study (PMC8468089) describes camelina as “a low-input, high-yield oilseed crop that produces highly unsaturated oil (~90%), has a desirable omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acid ratio, and high concentrations of tocopherols.” The plant tolerates drought, cold, and poor soils β€” making it one of the more environmentally sustainable oilseed crops available. Smart Earth Camelina Corp., one of the leading producers in Canada, cold-presses the oil to preserve its nutritional profile and produces it in a food-grade facility. The oil’s natural tocopherol (vitamin E) content gives it an oxidative stability advantage over many other plant-based oils, particularly flaxseed oil, which is highly prone to rancidity.
  • 2
    Is camelina oil safe for dogs β€” what does the actual research show? Yes β€” a peer-reviewed 16-week feeding study at the University of Guelph concluded that camelina oil “can be considered safe for use in the nutrition of adult dogs,” with no biologically significant differences in body weight, body condition, food intake, or blood values compared to canola and flaxseed oil controls.
    The safety study (Richards et al., Animals 2021, PMC8468089) used 30 privately-owned adult dogs of various breeds, ages, and sizes β€” making the results more representative of the real-world pet population than laboratory dog studies. After a 4-week wash-in period, dogs received camelina, canola, or flaxseed oil at 8.2 g per 100 g of total food intake for 16 weeks. Complete blood counts, serum biochemistry, body condition scores, body weight, and food intake were all tracked. Any statistically significant differences found were described as “small and due to normal biological variation.” The study is the foundational safety reference for camelina oil in canine nutrition.
  • 3
    What is the fatty acid profile of camelina oil β€” and why does the omega-3 to omega-6 ratio matter for dogs? Camelina oil contains approximately 35–40% omega-3 ALA, 15–20% omega-6 LA, and 14–16% omega-9, giving it an omega-3 to omega-6 ratio of roughly 1.6:1 to 1.8:1 β€” more omega-3 than omega-6, which is unusual among plant oils.
    The National Research Council’s Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats (2006) establishes the ideal dietary n-6:n-3 ratio for dogs as between 5:1 and 10:1 β€” meaning dogs need more omega-6 than omega-3, but not excessively so. Most modern commercial dog foods are heavy in omega-6 (often from corn, soybean, and sunflower oils) and low in omega-3, producing ratios well above 10:1 that tip the balance toward a pro-inflammatory state. Adding camelina oil helps correct this imbalance. The Frontiers in Veterinary Science study (PMC10034026) found that camelina oil has an n-3:n-6 ratio of 1:1.8 β€” meaning more omega-3 than omega-6 β€” which is more balanced than most other plant oils in commercial use.
  • 4
    What benefits has camelina oil shown in dogs in peer-reviewed studies? University of Guelph research found that camelina oil supplementation improved coat softness, shine, and color from baseline in 16 weeks, and was comparable to flaxseed and canola oil in supporting inflammatory and oxidative markers and skin barrier function.
    The 2023 Frontiers in Veterinary Science study (PMC10034026) found that “softness, shine, and color of the dogs’ coats increased from baseline” with the largest improvement seen at week 10. The researchers attributed this to the ALA omega-3 content, which can be converted β€” with limited efficiency β€” to EPA and DHA. They also measured transepidermal water loss (TEWL) as a proxy for skin barrier integrity and inflammatory markers in blood. Camelina performed comparably to both canola and flaxseed oil on all measured outcomes. Researchers note that future studies should investigate camelina oil specifically in dogs with dermatological conditions, as the study participants were already healthy dogs with good coats at baseline.
  • 5
    Is the omega-3 in camelina oil (ALA) as effective as the omega-3 in fish oil (EPA and DHA)? No β€” ALA from plant oils must be converted to EPA and DHA in the body to produce most anti-inflammatory benefits, and dogs have a limited ability to do this. Camelina oil is best understood as a complementary omega-3 source alongside marine EPA/DHA, not a direct replacement for fish oil in dogs with active inflammatory conditions.
    Both University of Guelph studies explicitly acknowledge this limitation. The Frontiers study explains: “ALA is converted into eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), though with limited efficiency.” Research cited in the safety study confirms that dogs β€” like humans and horses β€” have a “limited ability to convert LA and ALA to their respective LCPUFA.” EPA and DHA directly produce resolvins, which are anti-inflammatory and pro-resolving; ALA provides the precursor but the conversion yield is modest. For dogs with diagnosed inflammatory conditions (arthritis, allergic skin disease), fish oil’s direct EPA and DHA content typically provides stronger anti-inflammatory effects. For dogs eating primarily kibble that is already high in omega-6, camelina oil can meaningfully improve the dietary omega balance as a supportive supplement.
  • 6
    How does camelina oil compare to fish oil, flaxseed oil, and hemp seed oil for dogs? Camelina oil’s main advantages over fish oil are its plant-based origin (suitable for dogs with fish allergies), longer shelf life, no heavy metal contamination risk, and lower rancidity. Its main advantage over flaxseed oil is greater oxidative stability. Its main disadvantage versus fish oil is lower direct EPA and DHA content.
    The University of Guelph safety study identifies fish oil’s core weakness for the pet food industry: “large-scale fish oil production required to meet the demands of the growing pet food industry is not environmentally sustainable long-term.” Camelina oil’s naturally high tocopherol content means it does not oxidize (go rancid) as quickly as flaxseed oil β€” a meaningful practical advantage for owners adding oil to food daily. Smart Earth Camelina Corp. states their product is stable for up to one year after opening at room temperature and up to two years if stored unopened in the dark at 20Β°C. Hemp seed oil has a balanced omega-3:6 ratio but lower absolute concentrations of omega-3. Flaxseed oil has more omega-3 than camelina but is far more prone to rancidity.
  • 7
    What is the recommended dose of camelina oil for dogs? The commonly cited starting dose is 5 ml (1 teaspoon) per 25 lbs of body weight, once daily with food β€” with a recommendation to start with a smaller amount and gradually increase over one to two weeks to avoid loose stool.
    Smart Earth Camelina Corp. β€” whose product holds Health Canada’s Low Risk Veterinary Product (LRVP) approval β€” states the dose as 5 ml per 25 lb of body weight daily, divided into two doses if possible. They explicitly recommend starting with a smaller amount and working up, noting: “Too much oil too quickly can cause loose stool.” This gradual introduction is consistent with standard veterinary guidance for any oil supplement. The University of Guelph studies used a protocol-defined inclusion level of 8.2 g oil per 100 g of total food intake β€” which is a research dose designed for standardization, not a direct translation to home supplementation. Always confirm the dose with your veterinarian based on your dog’s current diet, body weight, health status, and any other supplements being given.
  • 8
    Are there dogs who should NOT take camelina oil? Yes β€” camelina oil should not be used in pregnant or lactating dogs, or dogs with bleeding disorders, without explicit veterinary approval. Dogs taking blood-thinning medications require particular caution, as high omega-3 diets can theoretically reduce platelet aggregation.
    Health Canada’s mandatory labeling for camelina oil as a Low Risk Veterinary Product includes precautionary statements for pregnant, lactating, and bleeding-disordered animals. Smart Earth Camelina Corp. states these statements are regulatory requirements even though “there is no evidence camelina oil creates harm or risk to lactating animals or animals with bleeding issues” β€” they exist because no long-term documented studies specifically investigating these populations have been completed. The University of Guelph safety study also notes the theoretical concern: “there is a possibility that high n-3 diets could lead to increased bleeding” due to EPA’s substitution for arachidonic acid in platelet membranes, reducing thromboxane A2 production. This risk is theoretical at typical supplementation doses, but dogs on NSAIDs, aspirin, or anticoagulants should receive veterinary clearance first.
  • 9
    What are the most common side effects of camelina oil in dogs? Loose stool or soft feces is the most commonly reported effect when introducing too much oil too quickly. No adverse effects on blood values, body weight, or body condition were found in 16-week peer-reviewed feeding trials. Allergic reactions are possible but not documented in the available research.
    The University of Guelph safety study reported no biologically significant adverse effects across 30 dogs over 16 weeks. The primary practical side effect reported by manufacturers and users is GI upset β€” specifically loose stool β€” when the dose is introduced too rapidly. This is consistent with the GI response seen with any dietary oil added abruptly to a dog’s food. Starting with one-quarter of the target dose and increasing gradually over two weeks typically prevents this. Because camelina is a member of the Brassicaceae (mustard) family, dogs with known allergies to other mustard family plants may warrant extra caution and veterinary clearance before starting.
  • 10
    How should camelina oil be stored and how long does it stay fresh? Store in a cool, dark place. Opened bottles remain stable for approximately 12 months at room temperature away from light. Unopened bottles last up to 2 years at 20Β°C (68Β°F) in the dark. Do not use if the peroxide value exceeds 20 β€” oil with a sharp, paint-like, or excessively “fishy” smell may have oxidized and should be discarded.
    Smart Earth Camelina Corp. specifies that their oil’s peroxide value must be less than 5 when freshly pressed β€” a measure of oxidation stability. A peroxide value exceeding 20 indicates the oil has oxidized and is no longer recommended for use. Camelina oil’s natural high tocopherol (vitamin E) content is its key stability advantage: this antioxidant prevents the fatty acids from oxidizing as quickly as they would in flaxseed oil. For long-term storage beyond two years, the product can be frozen. Unlike fish oil, which requires refrigeration after opening and has a strong, potentially off-putting odor as it ages, properly stored camelina oil has a mild, neutral flavor that most dogs accept readily mixed directly into their food.

Sources: PMC8468089 β€” Richards S, Burron S, Ma DWL, Pearson W, Trevizan L, Minikhiem D, Grant C, Patterson K, Shoveller AK. “Safety of Dietary Camelina Oil Supplementation in Healthy, Adult Dogs.” Animals (Basel). 2021 Sep 5;11(9):2603. doi:10.3390/ani11092603 (Univ. of Guelph β€” 30 dogs, 16 weeks; no biologically significant differences in BW/BCS/FI/hematology; safe for adult canine nutrition; n-6:n-3 ratio 1:1.8; high tocopherols; ~90% PUFA); PMC10034026 β€” Richards TL, Burron S, Ma DWL, Pearson W, Trevizan L, Minikhiem D, Grant C, Patterson K, Shoveller AK. “Effects of dietary camelina, flaxseed, and canola oil supplementation on inflammatory and oxidative markers, transepidermal water loss, and coat quality in healthy adult dogs.” Front Vet Sci. 2023 Mar 9;10:1085890. doi:10.3389/fvets.2023.1085890 (coat quality improved β€” softness/shine/color; largest improvement week 10; comparable to canola and flaxseed on TEWL and inflammatory markers; ALA conversion to EPA/DHA limited); NRC Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats 2006 (ideal n-6:n-3 ratio 5:1–10:1 for dogs; omega-6 and omega-3 essential in canine diet); Smart Earth Camelina Corp. (smartearthcamelina.com/pages/camelina-for-dogs) β€” Health Canada LRVP approval; dose 5 ml per 25 lb daily; storage: 1 year opened, 2 years unopened at 20Β°C; peroxide value <5 fresh, >20 not recommended; glucosinolate notes; bleeding precaution mandatory label; Lolahemp “Dog Owner’s Guide to Camelina Oil” Nov 17 2025 (camelina vs fish oil comparison; balanced ratio; plant-based alternative; longer shelf life than fish oil; consult vet on dosage)

πŸ§ͺ Camelina Oil Fatty Acid Profile β€” What’s Inside the Bottle
πŸ”΅
Omega-3 (ALA)
~35–40%
Alpha-linolenic acid β€” primary omega-3. Parent compound of EPA and DHA. Essential for dogs (cannot produce endogenously). Ratio of n-3:n-6 is 1:1.8 β€” more omega-3 than omega-6, unlike most plant oils.
🟒
Omega-6 (LA)
~15–20%
Linoleic acid β€” essential omega-6. Supports skin integrity and immune function. Lower omega-6 relative to omega-3 helps correct the excess omega-6 imbalance in most commercial kibble diets.
🟑
Omega-9 + Vitamin E
~14–16%
Oleic acid (omega-9) supports cardiovascular health. Naturally high tocopherol (vitamin E) content β€” camelina’s key stability advantage. Acts as a built-in antioxidant, extending shelf life and reducing rancidity risk.
πŸ”¬ Why the n-6:n-3 Balance Matters for Your Dog

The Frontiers in Veterinary Science study explains: “An increase in endogenous n-6 AA results in a prothrombotic, pro-constructive, and pro-inflammatory state, whereas increased EPA and DHA give rise to resolvins, which are anti-inflammatory and pro-resolving.” Most commercial kibble provides omega-6:omega-3 ratios far above the NRC-recommended 5:1–10:1 maximum. Camelina oil’s inverted ratio (more omega-3 than omega-6) makes it a practical tool to help pull that ratio back toward the healthy range β€” without the sustainability concerns and heavy metal risks of large-scale fish oil supplementation.

Sources: PMC10034026 Frontiers Vet Sci 2023 (camelina oil n-3:n-6 ratio = 1:1.8; ALA parent compound of EPA/DHA; pro/anti-inflammatory eicosanoid pathway; NRC ideal n-6:n-3 5:1–10:1); PMC8468089 Animals 2021 (~90% PUFA; high tocopherols; n-6:n-3 = 1:1.8); Smart Earth Camelina Corp. (1.6:1–1.8:1 omega-3 to omega-6 confirmed; vitamin E natural antioxidant; omega-9 present)

βš–οΈ Camelina Oil Dosage Guide by Dog Weight
⚠️ Reference Only β€” Confirm With Your Vet Before Starting

The doses below reflect the commonly cited manufacturer guideline of 5 ml (1 teaspoon) per 25 lbs of body weight, once daily. This is a supplementation guideline β€” not an FDA-approved veterinary prescription. Your vet will consider your dog’s current diet, health status, other supplements, and any medications before advising on an appropriate dose. Always start with one-quarter of the target dose and increase gradually over 1–2 weeks to allow your dog’s digestive system to adjust and prevent loose stool.

10 lbs (4.5 kg)
2 ml
~Β½ tsp once daily
Start: 0.5 ml and build up
25 lbs (11 kg)
5 ml
1 tsp once daily
Start: 1.25 ml and build up
50 lbs (23 kg)
10 ml
2 tsp once daily
Divide into 2Γ— daily if possible
75 lbs (34 kg)
15 ml
1 tbsp once daily
Divide into 2Γ— daily if possible
100 lbs (45 kg)
20 ml
4 tsp daily
Best divided into 2 doses
Storage
Cool & Dark
Up to 12 months opened;
2 years unopened at 68Β°F
πŸ“‹ How to Introduce Camelina Oil Without Upsetting Your Dog’s Stomach
  • Week 1: Give one-quarter of the target dose mixed into food at the same meal time each day. Watch for any loose stool or GI changes.
  • Week 2: If well-tolerated, increase to half the target dose. Continue monitoring stool consistency.
  • Week 3: Increase to three-quarters of the target dose if no GI issues.
  • Week 4 onward: Reach and maintain the full target dose if all is well. If loose stool occurs at any stage, drop back to the previous amount for another week before increasing again.
  • Always give with food β€” mixing the oil directly into the meal reduces the chance of GI upset and most dogs accept it readily.

Sources: Smart Earth Camelina Corp. (5 ml per 25 lb daily; divide into 2x if possible; start smaller and work up; too much too quickly causes loose stool; give with or without food); DOGsAGE / Smart Earth Canada (same dosing protocol); Smart Earth Camelina Corp. storage guidance (1 year opened room temp; 2 years unopened 20Β°C/68Β°F; long-term frozen storage possible)

⚠️ Side Effects & Who Should Use Extra Caution
🀒
Common β€” Manage with Slow Introduction
  • Loose stool or soft feces (most common)
  • Mild stomach gurgling
  • Temporary reduced appetite when first introduced
  • Oily coat or stools (dose-dependent)

Prevention: Start at one-quarter dose and increase gradually over 3–4 weeks. Always give with food. Drop back to previous dose if GI symptoms appear. These effects are not seen in research at gradual doses.

🚨
Stop & Call Vet β€” High-Risk Situations
  • Prolonged or bloody diarrhea
  • Vomiting more than 2 times
  • Unusual bleeding or bruising
  • Known allergy to mustard family plants
  • Pregnant or nursing dog (no long-term studies)
  • Bleeding disorder (theoretical platelet risk)

Mandatory precaution per Health Canada label: Not for use in pregnant, lactating, or bleeding-disordered animals without veterinary guidance.

🌿 A Note on Glucosinolates β€” The Mustard Family Caveat

Camelina is a member of the Brassicaceae (mustard) family and its seeds contain glucosinolates β€” secondary plant metabolites also found in canola seeds. The University of Guelph safety study notes: “Ingestion of glucosinolates have some adverse effects in animals, including decreased palatability of diets and reduced growth and performance of animals, and as such, inclusion of camelina meal in diets must be restricted.” Importantly, these concerns apply primarily to camelina meal (the solid remaining after oil extraction) β€” not to the cold-pressed oil itself, from which most glucosinolates are removed or diluted during processing. The 16-week feeding study found no glucosinolate-related adverse effects in dogs consuming the oil. Nevertheless, if your dog has a known sensitivity to mustard, broccoli, kale, or other Brassica family plants, discuss this with your vet before starting.

Sources: PMC8468089 Animals 2021 (no adverse effects 16 weeks; glucosinolates in seeds/meal not oil; livestock meal restricted to <10%; monogastrics more susceptible to glucosinolates); Smart Earth Camelina Corp. label (not for pregnant/lactating/bleeding disorder animals; Health Canada mandatory precautionary statements; no evidence of harm in these groups but no long-term studies); PMC10034026 (no negative outcomes 30 dogs 16 weeks)

πŸ“‹ Camelina vs. Fish, Flaxseed & Hemp Oil β€” Side-by-Side Comparison
Feature Camelina Oil Fish Oil Flaxseed Oil Hemp Seed Oil
Fatty Acid Profile
Primary omega-3ALA (35–40%)EPA + DHAALA (55–60%)ALA (~18%)
Omega-3:6 ratio~1.8:1 (more n-3)Very high n-3~4:1 (more n-3)~1:3 (balanced)
Direct EPA/DHANone (ALA only)Yes β€” highNone (ALA only)None (ALA only)
Vitamin E contentHigh (natural)LowLow-moderateModerate
Practical Considerations
Shelf life (opened)~12 months2–3 months2–4 months6 months
Refrigeration neededNoYesYesRecommended
Rancidity riskLow (tocopherols)HighVery highModerate
Heavy metal riskMinimal (plant)Low-moderateMinimalMinimal
Suitable fish allergy dogsYesNoYesYes
Palatability (dogs)Generally goodGenerally goodVariableVariable
Evidence & Regulatory Status
Peer-reviewed canine studiesYes β€” 2 (Univ. of Guelph)ManyLimitedVery limited
Health Canada veterinary approvalYes β€” LRVPNot specificNot specificNot specific
Best forCoat, skin, omega balance in kibble-fed dogsActive inflammation, joint diseaseBudget omega-3 sourceBalanced EFA supplement

Sources: PMC8468089 Animals 2021 (camelina safety; ~90% PUFA; high tocopherols; n-6:n-3 = 1:1.8; LRVP Health Canada); PMC10034026 Frontiers Vet Sci 2023 (camelina vs flaxseed vs canola β€” coat and inflammatory outcomes comparable); Lolahemp Nov 2025 (camelina vs fish oil: fish preferred for direct EPA/DHA; camelina better shelf life/no contamination risk; suitable fish allergy dogs); Smart Earth Camelina Corp. (no refrigeration; 12 months opened; 2 years unopened; ALA-rich plant-based); Lolahemp Omega-3 for Dogs guide Nov 2025 (flaxseed: rich ALA but less efficiently converted to EPA/DHA; hemp: balanced but lower EPA/DHA content)

❓ Camelina Oil Questions β€” Answered Plainly

Yes β€” and some veterinary nutritionists consider this approach complementary. The reasoning: camelina oil provides ALA (the plant-based omega-3 precursor) and a balanced omega-6 ratio, while fish oil provides direct EPA and DHA for more immediate anti-inflammatory effects. Together, they address both the dietary omega balance and the direct long-chain omega-3 supply. DOGsAGE explicitly recommends: “For optimal health, give animals both a source of marine EPA & DHA Omega-3 and plant source of ALA Omega-3.” However, using both means more total fat and calories β€” something to factor in if your dog is prone to weight gain, pancreatitis, or has fat-restricted dietary requirements. Always calculate the total daily fat intake from all sources and confirm the combined dose with your vet. If your dog has any GI sensitivity, introduce only one oil at a time and give each a few weeks before adding the second.

Possibly not β€” but “omega-3 listed on the label” is not the same as “adequate omega-3 in the food.” Here is what to check:

  • What is the source of the omega-3? If the omega-3 comes from flaxseed or plant sources, your dog is getting ALA β€” which must be converted to EPA/DHA with limited efficiency. If the source is salmon, sardines, or fish meal, it contains direct EPA/DHA, which is more immediately usable.
  • What is the guaranteed analysis omega-3 level? Look for a minimum of 0.3%–0.5% omega-3 on a dry matter basis as a rough benchmark for maintenance. Dogs with inflammatory conditions may benefit from higher levels.
  • How old is the food? Omega-3 fatty acids in kibble oxidize over time β€” older food or food stored improperly may have significantly degraded omega-3 content even if the label shows adequate levels at time of manufacture.
  • What is the omega-6 level? Many “healthy” kibbles are still high in omega-6, which competes with omega-3 pathways. The ratio matters as much as the absolute amount.

The University of Guelph studies found measurable coat improvements even in healthy adult dogs eating commercial kibble β€” suggesting that supplemental omega-3 provides value even alongside a commercial diet. Ask your vet to review the omega-3:6 ratio in your dog’s specific food before deciding.

Based on the University of Guelph research, meaningful coat quality improvements became most apparent around week 10 of supplementation, with continued assessment through week 16. This timeline is consistent with what is seen in fish oil supplementation studies β€” skin and coat benefits take weeks to months because fatty acids must be incorporated into cell membranes and hair shaft lipids before changes become visible. Practical expectations:

  • 2–4 weeks: GI tolerance established, dog has adjusted to the supplement
  • 6–8 weeks: Some owners report early improvements in coat texture and sheen
  • 10–16 weeks: Most documented improvements in coat softness, shine, and shedding visible at this timepoint in research
  • For joint comfort and mobility: Anecdotal reports from owners suggest 4–8 weeks for changes in mobility, though no specific joint studies in dogs using camelina oil alone have been published

The research authors note that the placebo effect cannot be entirely ruled out in the coat quality assessments, since the control group in the study did not have an oil-free group for comparison. A fair evaluation requires consistent supplementation for at least 10–12 weeks before drawing conclusions.

Not specifically β€” but this is true of virtually all dietary oil supplements for pets in the United States. The FDA does not separately approve nutritional supplements for pets the way it approves veterinary drugs. Camelina oil falls into the category of a dietary ingredient rather than a veterinary drug in the U.S. regulatory framework.

What is relevant is that in Canada β€” where most commercial camelina oil for pets is produced β€” Smart Earth Camelina Corp. holds Health Canada’s Low Risk Veterinary Product (LRVP) approval for their camelina oil specifically for horses and dogs. This approval requires compliance with Health Canada labeling guidelines and quality standards, and is a higher bar than most pet supplements meet. The University of Guelph safety data supports the safety profile for adult dogs, and camelina meal has been approved as safe for use in broiler chickens, cattle, and laying hens by the relevant regulatory bodies. The FDA’s GRAS (Generally Recognized as Safe) process for animal feeds has not been specifically applied to camelina oil in dogs, though the University of Guelph researchers specifically designed their safety study as a prerequisite to that type of regulatory application.

Potentially, yes β€” but with important nuance. Omega-3 fatty acids have well-established anti-inflammatory properties relevant to joint health in dogs. The mechanism involves EPA and DHA reducing the production of pro-inflammatory eicosanoids that contribute to joint inflammation. However, camelina oil provides ALA, which must be converted to EPA and DHA β€” and dogs have limited conversion efficiency. This means camelina oil alone is unlikely to provide the same degree of joint support as fish oil, which delivers EPA and DHA directly.

For a senior dog with diagnosed osteoarthritis or significant joint disease, a combination approach β€” camelina oil for dietary omega balance and dietary EPA/DHA from fish oil or algae-sourced DHA for direct anti-inflammatory effects β€” is likely more effective than camelina oil alone. Canpressco, a Canadian camelina oil producer, documents user testimonials from owners of senior dogs reporting improved mobility, including one owner of a 13-year-old Siberian Husky who reported joint improvement. These are anecdotal, not clinical data. Your veterinarian is best positioned to recommend the right combination of supplements, medications, and dietary strategies for your senior dog’s specific joint condition.

Given that the supplement market for pets is not uniformly regulated, these are the key markers of a quality camelina oil product:

  • Cold-pressed extraction. Cold pressing preserves the tocopherols, fatty acids, and nutritional integrity of the oil. Heat-extracted or solvent-extracted oils may have degraded nutrients and residue concerns.
  • Single ingredient β€” 100% Camelina sativa oil. No additives, artificial preservatives, flavoring agents, or carrier oils. The product should have one ingredient on its label.
  • Non-GMO certified. While camelina is not a widely GMO-modified crop, certification provides transparency about agricultural practices.
  • Peroxide value disclosure or freshness guarantee. Quality producers disclose their oxidation testing standards. Smart Earth requires a peroxide value below 5 at pressing β€” a marker of freshness and stability.
  • Clear batch date or expiration date. Avoid unmarked or undated products β€” you cannot assess freshness without knowing when the oil was pressed or bottled.
  • Produced in a food-grade facility. Processing in a human food-grade environment provides quality assurance standards beyond those required for some pet products.
  • Health Canada LRVP approval (for Canadian products) is an additional quality signal β€” it requires compliance with regulatory labeling and quality standards.
πŸ“Š Camelina Oil for Dogs β€” Key Numbers at a Glance
🌿 Omega-3 Content
~35–40%
ALA omega-3 percentage in camelina oil β€” higher than canola (10%) and about half that of flaxseed (55–60%), but with far superior oxidative stability than flaxseed due to natural vitamin E content.
βš–οΈ Daily Reference Dose
5 ml / 25 lbs
1 teaspoon per 25 lbs of body weight, once daily. Divide into two doses if possible. Start at one-quarter dose and build gradually over 3–4 weeks to prevent loose stool.
πŸ“… Study Duration
16 Weeks
Both University of Guelph peer-reviewed studies ran for 16 weeks with 30 client-owned adult dogs. Safety confirmed. Coat improvements largest at week 10. Comparable to canola and flaxseed on all measured outcomes.
πŸ—„οΈ Shelf Life (Opened)
~12 Months
At room temperature, away from light. Up to 2 years unopened at 68Β°F (20Β°C). Discard if oil smells rancid or sharp. Peroxide value must stay below 20 for safe use. No refrigeration required.
βœ… Five Steps for Using Camelina Oil Safely With Your Dog
  • Step 1: Talk to your vet first. Share what you know β€” including this guide’s sources β€” and ask whether camelina oil makes sense for your dog’s current diet, health status, and any medications. This is especially important if your dog is pregnant, nursing, has a bleeding disorder, or takes anti-inflammatory or blood-thinning medications.
  • Step 2: Choose a cold-pressed, single-ingredient, non-GMO product. Look for a clear batch date, a peroxide value guarantee, and food-grade facility processing. Health Canada LRVP approval (for Canadian products) is an additional quality indicator.
  • Step 3: Start at one-quarter of the target dose. Mix directly into food. Increase gradually over 3–4 weeks. If loose stool occurs, drop back to the previous level for another week before increasing again. There is no rush.
  • Step 4: Give it at least 10–12 weeks before evaluating results. Fatty acid incorporation into cell membranes and coat takes time. The University of Guelph research found the largest coat quality improvements at week 10. A fair trial requires consistent, gradual supplementation over this timeframe.
  • Step 5: Store properly and monitor freshness. Keep in a cool, dark place. Smell the oil periodically β€” rancid oil has a sharp, paint-like odor and should be discarded. Replace the bottle at the manufacturer’s recommended expiration and do not use oil with visible cloudiness or an off smell.
🚨 Three Mistakes Dog Owners Make with Camelina Oil
  • Starting at the full dose immediately. Introducing any oil supplement too quickly almost always causes loose stool. Starting at one-quarter dose and building gradually is the single most effective way to prevent GI upset β€” and is explicitly recommended by manufacturers and consistent with veterinary supplement guidance for all dietary oils.
  • Expecting it to replace fish oil for an arthritic dog. ALA omega-3 must be converted to EPA and DHA in the body to produce most anti-inflammatory effects β€” and dogs have limited conversion efficiency. For dogs with diagnosed inflammatory joint disease, fish oil’s direct EPA/DHA content provides stronger, more immediate anti-inflammatory effects. Camelina oil is best used as a dietary omega-balance supplement or in combination with a marine omega-3 source, not as a standalone anti-inflammatory intervention for clinical arthritis.
  • Using rancid or old oil. Oxidized oil is at best ineffective and at worst harmful to cellular health. A sharp, paint-like, or overly “fishy” smell means the oil has oxidized beyond safe use. Always check the smell before each use, respect the expiration date, and store in a cool, dark location. Camelina oil’s natural vitamin E content makes it more stable than most alternatives β€” but it is not immune to oxidation once opened and exposed to light and air.
πŸ”¬ Honest Assessment: What the Research Shows β€” and What It Doesn’t Yet

Camelina oil is one of the better-studied plant-based oil supplements in canine nutrition β€” with two published peer-reviewed trials from the University of Guelph specifically evaluating its use in dogs. The evidence supports its safety in healthy adult dogs and its comparability to canola and flaxseed oil for coat quality and inflammatory markers. What the research has not yet established: its effects in dogs with active inflammatory conditions (the study used healthy dogs), its long-term effects beyond 16 weeks, its optimal dose for different body sizes and conditions, or its effects in puppies, senior dogs with disease, or pregnant/lactating animals. The honest vet’s position: a promising, safe, sustainable supplement for most healthy adult dogs β€” worth discussing with your veterinarian, especially for dogs eating omega-6-heavy kibble diets who cannot tolerate fish products.

Β© BestiePaws.com β€” This guide is independently researched for educational purposes only. It is not veterinary medical advice and does not replace a licensed veterinarian’s examination or recommendation. All health claims and data are sourced from peer-reviewed scientific publications, official regulatory sources, and verified manufacturer information as of March 2026. Supplement science evolves β€” confirm current guidance with your veterinarian. Camelina oil is a dietary supplement, not a veterinary drug, and has not been evaluated by the U.S. FDA for specific health claims in dogs. For emergencies: ASPCA Animal Poison Control (888) 426-4435 • Pet Poison Helpline (855) 764-7661 • Both open 24 hours (consultation fee applies).

Primary sources: PMC8468089 β€” Richards S, Burron S, Ma DWL, Pearson W, Trevizan L, Minikhiem D, Grant C, Patterson K, Shoveller AK. “Safety of Dietary Camelina Oil Supplementation in Healthy, Adult Dogs.” Animals (Basel). 2021 Sep 5;11(9):2603. doi:10.3390/ani11092603. PMID:34573569. (University of Guelph Animal Nutritional Sciences; 30 privately-owned adult dogs, 16 weeks; n=30; canola and flaxseed controls; camelina oil safe; no BW/BCS/FI/hematology adverse effects; n-6:n-3 = 1:1.8; ~90% PUFA; high tocopherols; ALA conversion limited; glucosinolate notes in seeds/meal; theoretical bleeding concern high n-3 diets; GRAS process context); PMC10034026 β€” Richards TL, Burron S, Ma DWL, Pearson W, Trevizan L, Minikhiem D, Grant C, Patterson K, Shoveller AK. “Effects of dietary camelina, flaxseed, and canola oil supplementation on inflammatory and oxidative markers, transepidermal water loss, and coat quality in healthy adult dogs.” Front Vet Sci. 2023 Mar 9;10:1085890. doi:10.3389/fvets.2023.1085890. PMID:36968475. (University of Guelph; 30 dogs 16 weeks; coat softness/shine/color increased from baseline; largest improvement week 10; ALA converted EPA/DHA limited efficiency; transepidermal water loss comparable; no negative outcomes; no no-oil control group limitation; future research dermatological dogs recommended; n-3:n-6 = 1:1.8 camelina vs 1:4.19 flaxseed vs 1:0.59 canola); NRC Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats. 2006. National Academies Press. Washington DC. (ideal n-6:n-3 ratio 5:1–10:1 for dogs; ALA and LA essential in canine diet; endogenous EPA/DHA production limited); Smart Earth Camelina Corp. smartearthcamelina.com and smartearthcamelina.ca (Health Canada LRVP approval β€” Low Risk Veterinary Product; dose 5 ml per 25 lb daily; divide 2x if possible; start smaller; loose stool if too fast; storage 1 year opened / 2 years unopened at 20Β°C / frozen long-term; peroxide value <5 fresh / >20 not recommended; no additives GMO-free cold pressed; bleeding/pregnancy label mandatory Health Canada; food-grade facility); Lolahemp “Dog Owner’s Guide to Camelina Oil” Nov 17 2025 lolahemp.com (camelina vs fish oil; ALA plant-based; longer shelf life vs fish oil; suitable fish allergy; fish oil preferred direct EPA/DHA inflammation; vet consultation recommended); Lolahemp “Omega 3 Fatty Acids for Dogs” Nov 5 2025 (camelina DHA source less contamination risk; hemp seed lower EPA/DHA; flaxseed less efficiently converted); Carnivora.ca Camelina Oil (omega-3-6-9 profile; anti-inflammatory ALA; hot spots and itching; joint mobility; skin and coat); Canpressco.com (senior dog joint testimonials; omega-3:6 ratio 2:1; high gamma-tocopherol stability; Saskatchewan-grown); DOGsAGE/Smart Earth (5 ml per 25 lb directions; recommend both marine EPA/DHA and plant ALA sources); Health Canada LRVP (Low Risk Veterinary Product) regulatory framework β€” mandatory label statements for lactating/pregnant/bleeding disorder animals; ASPCA Animal Poison Control (888) 426-4435; Pet Poison Helpline (855) 764-7661

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  1. VALERIE says:
    March 22, 2026 at 3:28 pm

    We just had our 2-year-old Husky undergo surgery for bladder stones and crystals. We almost lost her, so we’re really concerned about preventing this from happening again.

    Would camelina oil help at all in preventing future stones?

    We’ve been adding a small squirt of camelina oil to her kibble about 3 times a week. Our older Husky (9 years old) has shown improved mobility since using it, which has been great to see.

    We’re also wondering if switching to a raw diet would be a better option for preventing stones.

    Reply
    1. Bestie Paws says:
      March 22, 2026 at 3:59 pm

      🧬 What Your Pup Actually Had β€” Stone Type Changes Everything


      Before any supplement or dietary strategy makes sense, the specific mineralogy of the stones retrieved from your husky’s bladder is the single most important data point you need. The two dominant stone types in dogs β€” struvite (magnesium ammonium phosphate) and calcium oxalate β€” are almost biological opposites in terms of what triggers them, how the urine chemistry differs, and crucially, what diet modifications actually prevent recurrence. Many owners and even some generalist vets treat these as interchangeable, which can inadvertently make the situation worse.

      According to the University of California–Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, struvite uroliths form in alkaline urine and in dogs are almost always infection-induced β€” specifically from urease-producing bacteria like Staphylococcus pseudintermedius that hydrolyze urea into ammonia, which then combines with magnesium and phosphate to crystallize. This means the real villain is the bacterial UTI itself, not necessarily the mineral content of the food. Female dogs are significantly more vulnerable due to anatomical factors that predispose them to recurrent urinary tract infections.

      Calcium oxalate stones, by contrast, cannot be dissolved with any diet β€” they must be physically removed, as your girl’s surgical team did. These form in acidic, concentrated urine, and their recurrence risk is tied to idiopathic hypercalciuria, genetics, and dietary factors including excessive protein, sodium, and oxalate-rich ingredients. The fact that your husky had both stones and crystals simultaneously β€” a “mixed” presentation β€” suggests her urinary environment may have been in metabolic flux, which makes comprehensive monitoring post-surgery non-negotiable.

      πŸ“‹ Stone Type Urine pH Root Cause Dissolvable? Prevention Focus
      🧫 Struvite Alkaline (>7.0) Bacterial UTI (urease bacteria) βœ… Yes (diet + antibiotics) Prevent UTI, acidify urine, ↓ Mg/Phos
      πŸͺ¨ Calcium Oxalate Acidic (<6.5) Hypercalciuria, genetics, diet ❌ No β€” surgery required Alkalinize urine, ↑ hydration, ↓ oxalates
      πŸ§ͺ Mixed / Both Variable / Unstable Metabolic + infectious overlap ⚠️ Partial Dual-approach therapeutic diet + specialist input

      🧴 Camelina Oil: What It Actually Does (and Doesn’t Do) for Urinary Health


      Camelina oil does not directly dissolve bladder stones, inhibit crystal nucleation, or acidify urine β€” so anyone claiming it’s a standalone urinary treatment is overselling it. What it does do, supported by peer-reviewed science, is work on the inflammatory and metabolic environment in which stone formation either thrives or diminishes.

      A landmark safety study from the University of Guelph’s Ontario Veterinary College confirmed that camelina oil is safe for use in adult canine nutrition, with results comparable to flaxseed and canola oil β€” both of which hold Generally Recognized As Safe (GRAS) status in veterinary nutrition. No biologically significant differences in body weight, body condition score, food intake, or blood chemistry were found across 30 dogs over 16 weeks.

      Camelina’s exceptional fatty acid profile β€” approximately 38% alpha-linolenic acid (ALA, an omega-3), an omega-6 to omega-3 ratio of roughly 1:1.8, and unusually high natural vitamin E content β€” delivers meaningful indirect urinary benefits through three distinct pathways:

      1. Anti-Inflammatory Action on the Bladder Wall
      Chronic, low-grade inflammation of the bladder epithelium creates a microenvironment that accelerates crystal adherence and aggregation. A 2024 Cambridge University Press review confirmed that the lowest omega-6/omega-3 ratio associated with measurable anti-inflammatory effects in companion animals is 1:3.75 β€” camelina’s ratio sits firmly within that beneficial window.

      2. Renal Tubular Protection via Omega-3 Pathways
      PubMed-indexed research on renal insufficiency in dogs found that omega-3 PUFAs are renoprotective, lowering serum cholesterol and reducing urinary prostaglandin E2 and thromboxane A2 β€” inflammatory eicosanoids that directly affect glomerular capillary pressure. Omega-6-dominant oils actually accelerated kidney function decline in the same models. This means the type of fat on your dog’s kibble matters as much as what you add on top.

      3. The Crystal-Resistance Link β€” A Key Finding
      A 2024 open-access paper in the Journal of Animal Science (University of Guelph) cited research showing that dogs and cats supplemented at a favorable omega ratio demonstrated decreased urine calcium concentrations, decreased relative supersaturation for struvite crystals, and greater resistance to oxalate crystal formation. The mechanism appears tied to how omega-3s modulate renal calcium handling and urinary mineral excretion. Camelina oil logically fits within this preventive framework β€” though direct dog-specific urolith studies on camelina remain sparse and are urgently needed.

      🌿 Camelina Oil β€” Key Properties Relevant to Urinary Health Value Urinary Relevance
      Omega-3 (ALA) content ~35–38% πŸ’§ Anti-inflammatory at the bladder wall
      Omega-6:Omega-3 ratio ~1:1.8 (inverted β€” more omega-3) βš–οΈ Ideal anti-inflammatory balance
      Vitamin E (tocopherols) High β€” natural antioxidant πŸ›‘οΈ Protects urothelium from oxidative damage
      Phosphorus content ~1.24 micrograms/gram (very low) βœ… Won’t add struvite precursors
      Oxidative stability 18–24 months (superior to fish oil) πŸ’‘ Rancid oil = pro-inflammatory β€” stability matters
      Health Canada classification LRVP β€” Low Risk Veterinary Product 🟒 Approved canine supplement

      πŸ’§ The Hydration Imperative β€” Why Your Squirt of Oil Needs a Partner


      Your instinct to add camelina oil to the kibble is sound β€” but here’s a dimension that urgently needs attention alongside any supplement strategy: kibble’s catastrophically low moisture content. Standard dry dog food sits at roughly 8–10% moisture. Raw and fresh food diets deliver 65–80% moisture. This gap is not trivial β€” it is arguably the most important environmental variable in preventing stone recurrence.

      The University of Minnesota’s Urolith Center, one of the premier stone analysis facilities in North America, consistently emphasizes that increasing urinary volume is the single most universally applicable prevention strategy regardless of stone type. More dilute urine means lower mineral supersaturation, which directly reduces the probability of crystal nucleation and growth. This is why therapeutic prescription diets for stone-prone dogs often contain added sodium β€” not for the sodium itself, but to drive thirst and increase urine output.

      If your 2-year-old husky remains on kibble, every meal should have warm water added generously β€” enough to create a soupy consistency she’ll happily lap. A second water bowl in a different room measurably increases average daily water intake in dogs. A flowing water fountain further stimulates drinking behavior, particularly in huskies drawn to movement. Fresh, clean water available at all times is not optional β€” it is primary medicine in this case.

      πŸ₯© Raw Food: A Legitimate Option, But Not a Simple One


      The raw feeding question is one of the most passionately debated in veterinary nutrition, and for stone-prone dogs, it deserves a genuinely measured answer rather than a reflexive dismissal or an uncritical endorsement.

      The Case FOR Raw for a Post-Surgical Struvite Dog:
      If your girl’s stones were primarily struvite, a raw meat-based diet has a compelling physiological rationale. Animal proteins are naturally acidifying β€” they lower urine pH, which directly discourages struvite formation (which requires alkaline urine). A raw diet’s high moisture content (70–80%) addresses the hydration problem fundamentally rather than requiring you to retrofit a dry food. Fresh whole foods contain no synthetic preservatives or low-quality plant proteins that can spike urine mineral concentrations.

      The Complication for a Calcium Oxalate or Mixed-Stone Dog:
      Calcium oxalate stones are actually more associated with acidic urine β€” meaning the very acidifying effect of high animal protein that helps with struvite can theoretically increase CaOx risk. Tufts University’s Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine and the OVC Pet Nutrition program both emphasize that knowing your stone type is the prerequisite for any dietary decision β€” not an afterthought.

      Additionally, raw diets β€” unless formulated by a board-certified veterinary nutritionist (DACVN) β€” carry real risks of calcium-phosphorus imbalances, which can paradoxically worsen stone risk if the ratio is wrong. Without proper formulation, critical minerals can be over- or under-represented in ways that a kibble’s guaranteed analysis simply doesn’t replicate.

      The nuanced expert position: A fresh, moisture-rich diet β€” whether commercially prepared raw with AAFCO/FEDIAF compliance, a gently cooked whole-food diet, or a high-quality wet/canned food β€” is likely superior to standard kibble for a stone-prone dog. But it must be selected based on confirmed stone type, under veterinary nutritionist guidance.

      πŸ“Š Diet Comparison for a Stone-Prone Husky 🍞 Standard Kibble πŸ₯© Raw / Fresh Whole Food
      Moisture content ❌ ~8–10% βœ… 65–80%
      Urine dilution potential ❌ Low β€” concentrated urine βœ… High β€” naturally dilute
      Urine acidification (struvite prevention) ⚠️ Variable by brand βœ… High (animal protein)
      Oxalate risk (CaOx stones) ⚠️ Depends on plant ingredient load ⚠️ Possibly ↑ with high protein / acidity
      Mineral control precision βœ… Therapeutic diets available ⚠️ Requires expert formulation
      Bacterial UTI risk factor ⚠️ Concentrated urine = UTI-friendly ⚠️ Raw meat = pathogen risk if poorly sourced
      Omega-3 delivery with camelina added 🟑 Supplement adds value to a deficient base βœ… Better baseline; oil further enhances

      πŸ“ Revisiting Your Camelina Protocol β€” Dose, Frequency & a Critical Gap


      You mentioned a “small squirt” three times per week. Health Canada-approved dosing for camelina oil in dogs recommends 5 mL (1 teaspoon) per 25 lbs of body weight daily, ideally divided into two administrations. A 2-year-old female husky typically weighs 35–50 lbs, meaning a target range of roughly 7–10 mL daily. Three small squirts per week falls meaningfully below this threshold β€” it’s not harmful, but it’s also unlikely to be generating the sustained fatty acid tissue saturation needed for a measurable anti-inflammatory effect.

      The ALA Conversion Problem is the other critical nuance: dogs are notoriously poor converters of ALA (the omega-3 in camelina) into the bioactive long-chain EPA and DHA that drive the most documented anti-inflammatory benefits. The University of Guelph’s OVC Pet Nutrition program confirms that while ALA is required in the diet, the amounts of EPA and DHA produced from ALA in the body are not enough to see beneficial effects β€” meaning direct EPA+DHA supplementation is often necessary alongside plant-based ALA. Think of camelina as maintaining the omega-6:omega-3 ratio foundation, while marine omega-3s (fish oil, sardine oil, algae-based DHA) deliver the therapeutic dose.

      Practical post-surgery protocol (pending vet confirmation for your specific dog):

      • ▢️  Continue camelina oil daily (not 3x/week) at weight-appropriate dose
      • ▢️  Add a quality marine EPA+DHA source β€” sardine oil, anchovy oil, or algae-based DHA
      • ▢️  Add warm water to every meal generously
      • ▢️  Avoid vitamin C supplementation β€” converts to oxalate in the body
      • ▢️  Avoid high-oxalate treats: spinach, beets, sweet potato, brown rice, berries
      • ▢️  Monthly urinalysis for at least 6 months post-surgery
      • ▢️  Urine culture at each check β€” not just a dipstick β€” to catch UTI recurrence early

      πŸ§“ Your 9-Year-Old Husky on Camelina β€” The Mobility Win Is Science, Not Placebo


      What you’re observing in your senior husky’s improved mobility is backed by increasingly robust clinical evidence. A 2024 study published in Animals (MDPI), involving the Fatty Acid Research Institute, found that EPA + DHA supplementation reduced overall pain scores by 19% in dogs β€” the mechanism being EPA and DHA’s competition with arachidonic acid for receptor availability, which downregulates the inflammatory cascade at the molecular level.

      For a 9-year-old husky, joint cartilage is almost certainly exhibiting some degree of age-related change. Camelina’s ALA, while needing conversion, still contributes to the broader fatty acid pool that modulates prostaglandins and leukotrienes β€” the primary chemical messengers of joint inflammation. The vitamin E content in camelina oil additionally serves as a direct antioxidant within joint fluid, potentially slowing oxidative degradation of cartilage.

      The same principle applies here as with the younger dog: adding a marine EPA+DHA source alongside the camelina for the senior husky would likely amplify what you’re already seeing. The combination of plant-source ALA (camelina) and marine long-chain EPA+DHA operates synergistically β€” they access different parts of the same anti-inflammatory pathway.

      At 9 years in a large breed, kidney function monitoring becomes relevant because aging kidneys handle mineral excretion less efficiently. Research consistently shows omega-3 PUFAs are renoprotective β€” they lower glomerular capillary pressure, reduce urinary inflammatory prostaglandins, and help maintain filtration capacity longer. Camelina oil for your senior boy isn’t just about joint comfort; it may be quietly protecting his kidney longevity as well.

      πŸ§“ Senior Husky (9yr) β€” Camelina Oil Benefits by System Effect Evidence Base
      🦴 Joint & Mobility βœ… Anti-inflammatory Animals MDPI 2024; Uni SΓ£o Paulo 2025
      πŸ«€ Kidney Protection βœ… Renoprotective (omega-3 PUFAs) PubMed renal insufficiency studies
      🧠 Cognitive Function 🟑 Emerging β€” needs EPA+DHA addition Cambridge NRR 2025
      🐾 Coat & Skin βœ… ALA maintains skin barrier integrity OVC Guelph 2025
      ❀️ Heart Rhythm βœ… EPA+DHA reduce arrhythmia risk PetMD / PubMed cardiology data

      ⚠️ What to Watch For Post-Surgery β€” The Warning Signs Most Owners Miss


      Recurrence rates for bladder stones in dogs are sobering β€” some studies cite rates as high as 25–50% within 1–2 years without active dietary management. The post-surgical period is the highest-risk window, partly because surgical sutures in the bladder wall can themselves serve as nucleation points for new crystal deposition β€” a mechanism documented in veterinary urology literature accounting for roughly 9% of urolith recurrences.

      Early warning signs requiring immediate veterinary attention:

      • πŸ”΄  Straining to urinate with little or no output β€” a medical emergency post-op
      • πŸ”΄  Blood in urine persisting beyond 2–3 weeks after surgery
      • πŸ”΄  Licking at the urinary opening excessively β€” early UTI signal
      • πŸ”΄  Increased drinking with decreased urination β€” renal stress indicator
      • 🟑  Urinating in unusual places in a house-trained dog β€” discomfort sign
      • 🟑  Cloudy or strong-smelling urine β€” may indicate bacterial recolonization
      • 🟑  Reduced appetite or lethargy beyond 1 week post-op β€” worth flagging

      The UTI-struvite connection means antibiotic stewardship post-surgery is critical. Courses should be based on urine culture and sensitivity testing β€” not empirical broad-spectrum antibiotics. If struvite was present, bacteriological clearance must be confirmed both radiographically (no residual stone fragments on x-ray) AND microbiologically (negative urine culture), with antibiotics continued for 4 full weeks after radiographic resolution per veterinary internal medicine protocol. Premature discontinuation is one of the most common reasons struvite stones re-form within months of surgery.

      πŸ“‹ Expert Action Summary β€” Your Two Huskies


      πŸ“Œ Action πŸ• 2yr Husky (Post-Surgery) πŸ§“ 9yr Husky (Mobility)
      Camelina oil β€” continue? βœ… Yes, daily at correct dose βœ… Yes β€” working well, optimize dose
      Add marine EPA+DHA? ⚠️ Yes, with vet guidance on dose βœ… Highly recommended
      Add water to kibble? βœ… Urgent β€” every single meal βœ… Recommended for kidney support
      Switch to raw/fresh food? ⚠️ Possible benefit β€” requires DACVN guidance first ⚠️ Consider gently cooked or quality wet food
      Know your stone type? ❌ Non-negotiable β€” get stone analysis results N/A
      Urinalysis schedule? βœ… Monthly for 6mo, then quarterly ⚠️ Biannual β€” watch kidney values
      Avoid vitamin C supplements? ❌ Yes β€” converts to oxalate Avoid excess generally
      Consult a DACVN specialist? ❌ Yes β€” not just a general vet ⚠️ Worthwhile if budget allows

      Sources: PMC/PubMed (University of Guelph, 2021); Journal of Animal Science (2024); Nutrition Research Reviews, Cambridge University Press (2025); UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine; Tufts Cummings Veterinary School; University of Minnesota Urolith Center; OVC Pet Nutrition Program (updated Aug 2025); PetMD (2024–2025); Animals MDPI (2024); WholisticMatters (2025).

      This article is for informational purposes only. Always consult a licensed veterinarian or board-certified veterinary nutritionist (DACVN) before making changes to your dog’s diet or supplement regimen, particularly following surgery.

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