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Virginia Symptom Guide • Reviewed by Dr. Tiffany Delacruz, DVM • Last updated 2026-06-19

Dog Loss of Appetite in Virginia

A sudden loss of appetite (inappetence) in dogs is rarely just pickiness. Most dogs who skip a meal are telling you something — pain, nausea, illness, dental disease, or stress. A single skipped meal is usually fine; more than 24 hours of refusing food in an adult dog (or any meal-skipping in a puppy or senior dog) warrants attention.

For Virginia pet parents specifically: Virginia dogs frequently develop appetite loss tied to tick-borne illness (Lyme, anaplasmosis, ehrlichiosis), which all commonly cause lethargy plus inappetence as early signs. In Northern Virginia and the Shenandoah Valley specifically, any appetite-loss dog with outdoor exposure should be tested for tick-borne disease.

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Licensed in Virginia · Reviewed by Dr. Tiffany Delacruz, DVM · Last updated 2026-06-21

Important: This page is an educational reference. If your dog shows red-flag symptoms below, treat it as urgent and talk to a licensed veterinarian or visit an emergency clinic immediately. Telehealth is not a substitute for in-person care in emergencies.

Why loss of appetite matters in Virginia

Virginia leads the eastern US for tick-borne disease pressure (Lyme, anaplasmosis, ehrlichiosis), which drives a year-round elevated risk profile. Northern Virginia's commuter culture also produces distinct separation-anxiety patterns, while coastal Hampton Roads sees humid-climate ear and skin infections similar to Florida.

Virginia's veterinary patterns are dominated by tick load — the highest in the eastern US — making Lyme disease, anaplasmosis, and ehrlichiosis common differentials for lethargy, limping, fever, and inappetence. NoVA lawn-care chemicals trigger spring GI episodes, Hampton Roads humidity drives ear infections, and Blue Ridge wildlife encounters (snakes, rabies risk in raccoons/skunks) round out the regional risk profile.

Common causes of loss of appetite in Virginia dogs

  • Pain — dental, joint, abdominal, or other hidden source
  • Nausea (vomiting, GI inflammation, motion sickness)
  • Recent vaccination or medication
  • Stress or anxiety (new environment, new pet, schedule change)
  • Dental disease (broken tooth, abscess, severe periodontal disease)
  • Foreign body obstruction (urgent)
  • Pancreatitis
  • Kidney or liver disease
  • Cancer
  • Tick-borne disease

Red flags — call a vet immediately

  • Complete refusal of food AND water for more than 24 hours
  • Refusal of food in a puppy under 6 months
  • Refusal of food plus vomiting, lethargy, or pale gums
  • Refusal of food in a diabetic dog (life-threatening hypoglycemia risk)
  • Refusal of food plus jaundice (yellow gums or eyes)
  • Refusal of food plus distended abdomen
  • Sudden complete inappetence in a previously hungry dog

Any of these in your Virginia dog means stop reading the internet and call a vet or go to an emergency clinic. RexVet can help triage by video if you're not sure — but emergencies need in-person care.

When telehealth works — and when it doesn't

Telehealth works

RexVet can triage moderate appetite loss effectively, especially in established chronic-disease patients (cancer recovery, CKD, post-op recovery) where appetite stimulants like Cerenia, mirtazapine, or capromorelin are part of the long-term plan. We can refill these prescriptions and adjust dietary strategy.

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Go in-person

In-person care is essential for: completely refusing all food and water more than 24 hours, refusing food with vomiting and lethargy, suspected foreign body, jaundice, or any acute presentation in a puppy or diabetic dog.

What you can do at home for your Virginia dog

  1. 1 Warm the food slightly to release aroma (sick dogs eat warm food more readily)
  2. 2 Try high-value foods: boiled chicken, plain rice, small amounts of low-sodium broth
  3. 3 Hand-feed or use a different bowl — sometimes location/dish issues are the cause
  4. 4 Eliminate competing pets at mealtime if relevant
  5. 5 Track water intake — refusing both food and water is a bigger concern than refusing food alone
  6. 6 Note any other symptoms (mouth pain, drooling, dropping food, head-shaking)

Talk to a Virginia-licensed vet from home

RexVet is licensed across all 95 Virginia counties and 38 independent cities — $64.99 video visits 24/7.

$64.99 flat — no membership, no subscription, same price 24/7. Virginia-licensed RexVet veterinarians are on call 24/7 including evenings and weekends when most local clinics close.

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Loss of Appetite in Virginia dogs

Frequently asked questions

When should I worry about my Virginia dog won't eat?

Red flags that mean call a vet immediately: Complete refusal of food AND water for more than 24 hours; Refusal of food in a puppy under 6 months; Refusal of food plus vomiting, lethargy, or pale gums. Virginia-specific factor: Virginia dogs frequently develop appetite loss tied to tick-borne illness (Lyme, anaplasmosis, ehrlichiosis), which all commonly cause lethargy plus inappetence as early signs.

Is there an online vet licensed in Virginia for dog loss of appetite?

Yes — RexVet is a Virginia-licensed veterinary practice. Virginia-licensed RexVet veterinarians are on call 24/7 including evenings and weekends when most local clinics close. Our Virginia-licensed veterinarians can examine your dog by video and either treat the issue, prescribe medication, or refer to in-person care if needed. Visits are $64.99 flat.

Can a RexVet online vet treat loss of appetite in my dog?

For many cases, yes. RexVet can triage moderate appetite loss effectively, especially in established chronic-disease patients (cancer recovery, CKD, post-op recovery) where appetite stimulants like Cerenia, mirtazapine, or capromorelin are part of the long-term plan. We can refill these prescriptions and adjust dietary strategy. A $64.99 video visit gets you a licensed Virginia vet who can recommend home care, prescribe medications via RexVetRx (in-house pharmacy with same-day delivery in major Virginia ZIPs), or tell you when in-person care is required.

When does my Virginia dog need to be seen in person instead of online?

In-person care is essential for: completely refusing all food and water more than 24 hours, refusing food with vomiting and lethargy, suspected foreign body, jaundice, or any acute presentation in a puppy or diabetic dog. If your dog needs in-person care, Virginia has multiple emergency clinics — but RexVet can help triage by video first so you don't waste a trip if it's not needed.

Does Virginia's environment affect why my dog has loss of appetite?

Virginia dogs frequently develop appetite loss tied to tick-borne illness (Lyme, anaplasmosis, ehrlichiosis), which all commonly cause lethargy plus inappetence as early signs. In Northern Virginia and the Shenandoah Valley specifically, any appetite-loss dog with outdoor exposure should be tested for tick-borne disease.

What can I do at home for my dog's loss of appetite in Virginia?

Until you can speak with a vet: Warm the food slightly to release aroma (sick dogs eat warm food more readily); Try high-value foods: boiled chicken, plain rice, small amounts of low-sodium broth; Hand-feed or use a different bowl — sometimes location/dish issues are the cause. Never give human medications to your dog without veterinary guidance.

Can I get a prescription for my Virginia dog from an online vet?

Yes. RexVet veterinarians are licensed in Virginia and can prescribe medications, prescription diets, and Rx refills via $64.99 video visits. Prescriptions are filled through RexVet's in-house pharmacy (RexVetRx) with same-day delivery in most Virginia ZIP codes, or transferred to any local pharmacy.

How fast can I see a Virginia-licensed vet on RexVet?

Most Virginia pet parents are connected to a licensed veterinarian within minutes of booking, 24/7. There are no membership fees, no monthly subscriptions, and no surge pricing on evenings, weekends, or holidays — every visit is $64.99 flat.

Loss of Appetite in other states RexVet serves

Medical review by Dr. Tiffany Delacruz, DVM

Chief Executive Officer & Lead Veterinarian, RexVet. Licensed in Florida, New York, and Virginia.

This page is an educational reference and does not replace veterinary advice. Always consult a licensed veterinarian about your individual pet's symptoms.