Overview
EPI occurs when the pancreas fails to produce enough digestive enzymes, meaning food passes through undigested. Dogs eat ravenously but lose weight and produce large volumes of pale, greasy, foul-smelling stool. Without treatment, dogs literally starve despite eating. The condition is manageable with enzyme supplementation and dietary changes.
Symptoms to Watch For
- Ravenous appetite with weight loss
- Large, pale, greasy, foul-smelling stools
- Eating feces (coprophagia)
- Poor coat condition
- Flatulence and rumbling stomach
How Nutrition Helps
Enzyme replacement powder (pancreatin) added to every meal is the primary treatment. Highly digestible, low-fiber, moderate-fat diets reduce the workload on remaining pancreatic function. B12 supplementation is almost always needed, as EPI severely impairs B12 absorption. Small, frequent meals improve digestion.
How Activity Helps
Maintain normal activity levels. As enzyme supplementation restores nutrient absorption, weight and energy levels return to normal within weeks.
Prevention Tips
- Genetic testing for German Shepherds before breeding
- Monitor weight in predisposed breeds
- Don't ignore chronic loose stools and weight loss
- Feed highly digestible food to reduce pancreatic workload
- Annual wellness blood panels for at-risk breeds
Breeds at Higher Risk
German Shepherds (70% of cases), Rough-Coated Collies, Cavalier King Charles Spaniels, and Chow Chows.
Breeds more commonly affected
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