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Dog Probiotic and Digestive Health Tracker

When a dog is on a probiotic for loose stools, digestive upset, or long-term gut health, the only real measure of success is whether the digestion actually improves over time. PetHealthLog lets you schedule each probiotic dose, log stool quality and appetite day by day, and see whether things are trending in the right direction - so your vet appointment starts with a real record, not a rough impression. Free, no account, and it works offline.

Start tracking - it's free
No sign-up Works offline Doses and gut health together Vet-ready PDF

Knowing whether a probiotic is working requires a log

Dogs are put on probiotics for a range of reasons - loose stools after antibiotics, recurring digestive upset, inflammatory bowel conditions, or general gut health support. In every case, the question is the same: is the digestion actually getting better over days and weeks, or is it staying the same?

That question is nearly impossible to answer from memory alone. A dog can have a good day and a bad day for unrelated reasons, and a single observation tells you nothing. What tells you something is a consistent daily log - stool quality, appetite, any vomiting, the dose given - over several weeks. That pattern is what a vet can actually use to decide whether to continue, adjust, or stop the probiotic.

PetHealthLog gives you that log for free, with no account and no internet required. The daily habit of marking a probiotic dose and noting how your dog's digestion is doing stays simple enough to actually maintain.

What the dog probiotic tracker does

A digestive log only helps if it is quick to update and clear enough to show a vet. Here is how PetHealthLog handles both.

Common dog probiotic and digestive supplements

If your vet has recommended a probiotic for your dog, the most common veterinary-recommended options are single-strain sachets designed to sprinkle over food and multi-strain chews. Some dogs also benefit from a dietary fiber supplement such as pumpkin to support stool consistency alongside the probiotic. Which product is appropriate for your dog's specific digestive condition, and the correct dose for their weight, is something your veterinarian should advise on.

Once your vet has recommended digestive support, these links show highly-rated options on Amazon. Always confirm the product and dose with your veterinarian based on your dog's weight and condition.

Purina FortiFlora Dog Probiotic - Vet Recommended Fruitables Pumpkin Digestive Supplement

#ad - affiliate links: as an Amazon Associate, PetHealthLog may earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. Informational only, not veterinary advice. Always confirm the product and dose with your veterinarian.

Why free, offline, and no account matters

Giving a probiotic happens every day, usually at feeding time. It is one of those small additions to the routine that is easy to forget marking, especially when you are in a hurry. The last thing that should add friction is a login or a connection problem.

PetHealthLog stores everything locally on your device. Nothing is uploaded to a server, there is no tracking, and the app opens instantly whether or not you are online. Your dog's digestive health record stays entirely on your own device. You can export a backup any time and restore it on another phone.

Get started in under a minute

  1. Open the app - no download from an app store and no sign-up required.
  2. Add your dog, then add the probiotic and any other digestive supplements with their schedules.
  3. Mark each dose as you give it and add a quick stool or appetite note each day.
  4. Export the PDF before your next vet visit to show the full digestive health record.
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Frequently asked questions

Is this dog probiotic tracker really free?
Yes. Scheduling probiotic doses, logging stool consistency and appetite observations, tracking weight, and exporting the PDF report are all free. There is no sign-up, no account, and your dog's data stays on your own device.
How do I know if the probiotic is helping my dog?
The clearest signal is a consistent improvement in stool quality and appetite over days and weeks, not just a single good day. By logging a quick observation next to each probiotic dose, you can see whether there is a real trend toward improvement. That trend - alongside the dose adherence record - is what your vet needs to evaluate whether the probiotic is working or whether a different approach is needed.
Can it track other digestive supplements alongside the probiotic?
Yes. Some dogs are on a probiotic and a fiber supplement such as pumpkin, or a probiotic alongside a prescription digestive medication. You can add each supplement by name and set its own schedule, so everything shows up correctly on the same timeline.
How long does a dog probiotic take to work?
This varies by dog and by the specific reason a probiotic was recommended. Some dogs show improvement in stool consistency within a few days, while others may take longer. The right timeline to expect, and whether to continue or adjust, should be guided by your veterinarian. A daily log makes it possible to have that conversation with real data.
Does the tracker work without internet?
Yes. PetHealthLog is a progressive web app that works fully offline. Once loaded, you can mark a probiotic dose, log a stool observation, or review the history without a connection. The daily logging habit never depends on having a signal.
Is PetHealthLog a substitute for veterinary advice?
No. PetHealthLog is a record-keeping tool, not veterinary advice. Diagnosing the cause of digestive upset, choosing a probiotic, setting the correct dose, and deciding when to escalate treatment should always involve a licensed veterinarian. The tracker gives you and your vet an accurate record to work from.

Know whether your dog's digestion is actually improving

Free, offline, and ready the moment you open it.

Start with PetHealthLog
Informational only - not veterinary advice. PetHealthLog helps you track probiotic doses and digestive observations, but it does not diagnose digestive conditions, prescribe probiotics, or set doses. Diagnosis and treatment decisions should always be made with a licensed veterinarian.

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