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Vomiting & Diarrhea in Pets: What’s Urgent—and What to Do Right Now


Stomach troubles are one of the most common reasons pets visit urgent care. A single soft stool can be no big deal—but repeated vomiting, bloody diarrhea, or clear signs of discomfort can become serious quickly. Here’s how to tell what’s urgent, what to do at home, and how we help.

Red Flags That Need Same-Day Care


Bring your pet in today if you notice any of the following:

  • Vomiting more than once, or retching without producing anything
  • Blood in vomit or stool (bright red or coffee-ground/black)
  • Lethargy, belly pain, pale gums, or collapse
  • Not drinking or can’t keep water down
  • Bloat signs: tight, painful abdomen, unproductive retching, drooling (emergency)
  • Puppies/kittens, seniors, or pets with diabetes, Addison’s, Cushing’s, kidney/liver disease
  • Known or suspected foreign object/toxin ingestion (socks, string, trash, human meds)


What You Can Do Right Now (Before You Leave)

  • Remove food access; offer small sips of water every 15–30 minutes.
  • Do not give human medications (including Pepto-Bismol, ibuprofen, Tylenol, or hydrogen peroxide) unless a veterinarian directs you.
  • Gather helpful info: what your pet ate, any new treats/table scraps, plants/chemicals they could access, and the timing of signs.
  • If possible, bring a fresh stool/vomit sample (in a sealed bag or container) or a photo.
  • Diabetic pets: continue insulin as prescribed unless a vet advises otherwise.

Common Causes We See

  • Dietary indiscretion: sudden treats, rich/fatty foods, trash-raiding
  • Pancreatitis: often after high-fat foods; causes vomiting and pain
  • Foreign body: toys, socks, string (especially in cats)
  • Infections & parasites
  • Toxins: xylitol, chocolate, grapes/raisins, human meds
  • Metabolic disease: kidney/liver issues, diabetic crises, Addisonian episodes
  • Stress colitis after routine changes or boarding


How Urgent Care Pet Clinic Treats GI Upset


Our goal is fast relief and clear answers:

  • Triage & exam on arrival to assess dehydration and pain
  • In-house diagnostics: bloodwork, fecal testing, parvo testing (as needed), digital X-ray, and access to ultrasound
  • Therapeutics: anti-nausea meds, GI protectants, pain control, fluids (IV or SQ), antibiotics when appropriate
  • Care plan: what to feed, when to reintroduce meals, warning signs to watch, and follow-up with your primary vet

Prevention Tips

  • Make diet changes gradually over 5–7 days.
  • Skip table scraps—especially fatty foods.
  • Keep trash, toys, string, and hair ties out of reach.
  • Stay current on parasite prevention.
  • Store human medications and sugar-free products (xylitol) securely.

Quick FAQ


Q: My pet vomited once but seems fine. Can I monitor?

A: For healthy adult pets, you can monitor for 12–24 hours if there’s no more vomiting, no diarrhea, and normal energy. If anything worsens—or if your pet is very young, senior, or has a chronic condition—come in the same day.

Q: Is bloody diarrhea always an emergency?

A: It’s a red flag. Some causes are mild, but others are not. Same-day evaluation is safest.

Bottom line: If your pet is repeatedly vomiting, has bloody stool, or just “isn’t right,” timely care makes all the difference. We’re here to provide quick answers and gentle, effective treatment so your pet feels better—fast.