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

Dog Scooting in Virginia

Scooting — dragging the rear end across the floor — is your dog's way of telling you something itches, hurts, or is irritating their back end. The most common cause is impacted or infected anal glands. Other causes include intestinal parasites, allergies causing itchy skin around the anus, and occasionally rectal masses. Single episodes are usually nothing; recurrent scooting needs a vet visit.

For Virginia pet parents specifically: Virginia's mix of urban and rural dog populations sees both flea-driven tapeworm scooting and allergy-driven cases. Northern Virginia dogs with high lawn chemical exposure can develop allergic perianal irritation. Outdoor Virginia dogs face higher overall parasite burden.

Northern Virginia (Arlington, Alexandria, Fairfax), Hampton Roads (Virginia Beach, Norfolk, Newport News, Chesapeake), Richmond Metro
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Licensed in Virginia · Reviewed by Dr. Tiffany Delacruz, DVM · Last updated 2026-06-20

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 scooting 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 scooting in Virginia dogs

  • Full or impacted anal glands (most common cause by far)
  • Anal gland infection or abscess
  • Intestinal parasites (especially tapeworms)
  • Food or environmental allergies causing skin irritation around the anus
  • Diarrhea or soft stool not fully emptying the glands
  • Rectal foreign body (rare)
  • Rectal mass or tumor (especially in senior dogs)
  • Skin infection in the perineal area

Red flags — call a vet immediately

  • Visible swelling, redness, or bleeding around the anus
  • Foul odor from the rear end
  • Persistent scooting plus signs of pain when sitting
  • Visible mass or growth around the rectum
  • Scooting plus diarrhea, vomiting, or lethargy
  • Bloody discharge from the rectum
  • Severe straining to defecate

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 handles routine scooting cases — anal gland expression coaching, dewormer prescriptions for parasitic causes, allergy medication refills, and dietary fiber recommendations. We can also help you decide whether your dog needs a hands-on anal gland expression at a clinic or whether it can be done at home.

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Go in-person

Visible swelling, bleeding, or signs of an abscess need in-person care for drainage and antibiotics. Suspected rectal masses need a hands-on exam. Recurrent scooting that doesn't respond to home care needs in-person workup including fecal testing.

What you can do at home for your Virginia dog

  1. 1 Check the area for parasites, redness, or visible issues
  2. 2 Increase fiber in the diet (canned pumpkin — 1-2 tbsp/day for medium dogs)
  3. 3 Make sure stool is firm enough to express anal glands naturally
  4. 4 If you're trained on at-home anal gland expression, you can try it (most pet parents shouldn't)
  5. 5 Maintain consistent flea/tick prevention (tapeworms transmit through fleas)
  6. 6 Note if scooting correlates with specific foods, treats, or environments

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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Scooting in Virginia dogs

Frequently asked questions

When should I worry about my Virginia dog is scooting?

Red flags that mean call a vet immediately: Visible swelling, redness, or bleeding around the anus; Foul odor from the rear end; Persistent scooting plus signs of pain when sitting. Virginia-specific factor: Virginia's mix of urban and rural dog populations sees both flea-driven tapeworm scooting and allergy-driven cases.

Is there an online vet licensed in Virginia for dog scooting?

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 scooting in my dog?

For many cases, yes. RexVet handles routine scooting cases — anal gland expression coaching, dewormer prescriptions for parasitic causes, allergy medication refills, and dietary fiber recommendations. We can also help you decide whether your dog needs a hands-on anal gland expression at a clinic or whether it can be done at home. 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?

Visible swelling, bleeding, or signs of an abscess need in-person care for drainage and antibiotics. Suspected rectal masses need a hands-on exam. Recurrent scooting that doesn't respond to home care needs in-person workup including fecal testing. 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 scooting?

Virginia's mix of urban and rural dog populations sees both flea-driven tapeworm scooting and allergy-driven cases. Northern Virginia dogs with high lawn chemical exposure can develop allergic perianal irritation. Outdoor Virginia dogs face higher overall parasite burden.

What can I do at home for my dog's scooting in Virginia?

Until you can speak with a vet: Check the area for parasites, redness, or visible issues; Increase fiber in the diet (canned pumpkin — 1-2 tbsp/day for medium dogs); Make sure stool is firm enough to express anal glands naturally. 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.

Scooting 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.