Product title
Vendor
£19.99 | £24.99
Product title
Vendor
£19.99 | £24.99
Product title
Vendor
£19.99 | £24.99
Product title
Vendor
£19.99 | £24.99
Mid-Strength Antidepressant Tablets for Anxiety, Pain, and Skin Disorders in Pets
Product Description
Amitriptyline HCl 50mg Tablets are a prescription tricyclic antidepressant used by veterinarians for dogs and cats. By keeping serotonin and norepinephrine active longer in the brain by slowing their reuptake at presynaptic nerve terminals, while also bringing antihistamine and anticholinergic effects to the body, it covers a broad range of conditions, including behavioral anxiety disorders, chronic neuropathic pain, and allergic pruritic skin conditions. The 50mg strength fits medium-sized dogs and larger cats needing doses between the 25mg and 75mg options. Used entirely off-label and most effective alongside a structured behavioral modification plan.
Benefits
- Generalized Anxiety Treatment: Works on serotonin activity to address generalized anxiety, fear-based behaviors, and phobias in medium-sized dogs and cats.
- Chronic Pain Relief: Acts on central monoamine pathways to help manage neuropathic pain from osteoarthritis, intervertebral disc disease, and post-surgical recovery.
- Pruritic Skin Condition Support: The secondary antihistamine effect pulls back allergy-driven itching and skin inflammation in dogs with pruritic skin conditions.
- Feline Inappropriate Elimination: Helps bring down anxiety-driven urine spraying, house-soiling, and inappropriate elimination in cats alongside environmental management.
- Mid-Range Dose Flexibility: At 50mg, this fills the practical gap for pets whose needs fall between the lower and higher strengths.
Ingredients
Active Ingredients
Amitriptyline Hydrochloride
How to Use
Amitriptyline HCl 50mg Tablets are a prescription-only medication. A valid veterinarian's prescription is required to purchase this product.
Please follow your veterinarian's specific instructions for the dosage and administration of this medication for your pet.
Disclaimer: Dosage and administration of this medication must be determined by a licensed veterinarian. Always consult your veterinarian before administering or adjusting any prescription medication for your pet.
Tucking this tablet into a soft pill pocket or pill wrap treat is a simple way to get your pet to take their daily dose.
Shop Pill Pockets for Dogs | Shop Pill Pockets for Cats
Additional Information
Precautions
- Avoid With MAOIs: Pets that have received selegiline, amitraz, or any other monoamine oxidase inhibitor in the past 14 days should not be given this medication.
- No Amitraz Flea Collars: Amitraz-containing flea or tick collars should not be used during amitriptyline treatment due to the serious MAOI interaction risk.
- Never Stop Abruptly: Cutting this medication off suddenly can bring on withdrawal discomfort, so always taper the dose down gradually with veterinary guidance.
- Avoid in Hyperthyroidism: Pets with hyperthyroidism should not receive this medication, as dangerous toxic interactions with elevated thyroid hormone levels can develop.
- Avoid in Glaucoma and Urinary Retention: The anticholinergic effects of this medication can exacerbate glaucoma and urinary retention significantly worse in susceptible pets.
- Caution in Cardiac Arrhythmias: Pets with a cardiac arrhythmia history need careful management, as amitriptyline can interfere with the electrical conduction of the heart.
- Serotonin Syndrome Risk: SSRIs, trazodone, and tramadol should not be combined with this medication, as doing so can set off life-threatening serotonin syndrome.
Possible Side Effects
- Sedation: Drowsiness and lower energy are the most frequently seen reactions and tend to ease as the pet settles into consistent daily dosing.
- Dry Mouth and Constipation: Reduced saliva production and slowed gut motility from the anticholinergic action of this medication commonly show up in treated dogs and cats.
- Urinary Retention: Difficulty urinating or reduced urinary output can come up in some pets and should be flagged to a veterinarian promptly.
- Cardiac Arrhythmias: Irregular heart rhythms are a less common but serious reaction that calls for routine veterinary cardiac monitoring during treatment.
- Paradoxical Aggression: Unexpected aggression has come up in rare cases and should prompt stopping the medication and contacting a veterinarian right away.
Storage Information
- Controlled Room Temperature: Store tablets somewhere cool and dry, maintaining a temperature of 68°F to 77°F inside a tightly closed container away from heat and humidity.
- Protect from Light and Moisture: A dark, dry spot away from direct sunlight is the right place to keep these tablets and maintain their potency and stability.
- Out of Reach: Keep this medication somewhere that children and untreated animals in the home cannot get to it.
NOTE: For generic medications, the product image shown may not reflect the actual item received. Generic medications can vary in size, color, and shape between orders depending on the manufacturer. Additionally, your medication may arrive packaged in a HardyPaw Pharmacy vial.
Shipping & Return
We offer ground, express, and priority delivery; see our shipping policy for details.
For return instructions or product concerns, please refer to our detailed refund policy.
Prescription items are NON-RETURNABLE and NON-REFUNDABLE.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1: What is the typical time frame for amitriptyline to show behavioral improvement in pets?
Ans: Patience is part of the process with amitriptyline. Behavioral shifts tend to take hold gradually rather than appearing overnight, and the two to four week mark is generally when things start to become clear. Some pets move faster, some slower, and a veterinarian will use follow-up visits to read how things are progressing and make any changes that are needed.
Q2: Can amitriptyline 50mg be used for both behavior and pain management simultaneously in dogs?
Ans: Anxiety and chronic pain often show up together in dogs, and amitriptyline happens to work on both fronts through different pathways rather than just one. A dog dealing with osteoarthritis or spinal disease on top of behavioral anxiety is exactly the kind of case where that overlap becomes genuinely useful. A vet will look at the full picture to decide if it is the right fit.
Q3: What baseline testing should be done before starting amitriptyline in a pet?
Ans: Getting a baseline picture of the pet's blood, organ function, thyroid, and cardiac health before starting gives a veterinarian something to work from and flags anything that could make treatment riskier. Conditions like hyperthyroidism or underlying arrhythmias sitting undetected are the kinds of things that matter here. For pets staying on it long-term, coming back for periodic checks keeps anything developing from going unnoticed too long.
Q4: Can amitriptyline 50mg be used in senior dogs with both anxiety and joint pain?
Ans: For older dogs carrying both anxiety and joint pain, amitriptyline covers several fronts at once which is part of what makes it worth considering. The heart and kidneys need closer watching in seniors, and a vet will weigh that monitoring load against the expected benefit before landing on a dose.
Q5: What should I do if my pet accidentally receives a double dose of amitriptyline?
Ans: Getting in touch with a veterinarian or animal poison control center right away is essential if an overdose is suspected. Deep sedation, cardiac arrhythmias, seizures, and collapse are all signs that things have gone seriously wrong. Tricyclic antidepressant overdoses can turn into cardiac emergencies quickly, so acting immediately rather than watching and waiting gives the best chance of a good outcome.