Dog Anxiety Is Not One Condition — It Requires Matching the Right Product to the Right Trigger
Separation distress, noise phobia from firecrackers or thunderstorms, motion sickness during travel, and generalised fear aggression each present differently and respond to different treatments. A calming collar will not fix separation anxiety. A sedative will not fix noise phobia long-term. Getting the match right matters.
What is Available and How Each Works
Products here include Zylkene (alpha-casozepine — non-sedating, derived from milk protein), Adaptil pheromone diffusers and collars, Anxicare tablets, melatonin-based calming supplements, herbal calming pastes, and Calmpose Vet (prescription only) for clinically confirmed anxiety disorders. Zylkene is particularly suitable for travel and event-based anxiety — it does not sedate and can be given daily without dependence concerns.
Timing Matters More Than Most Pet Owners Realise
Pheromone products work best when started 2-3 weeks before an anticipated stressful event — not on the day of Diwali. If your dog shows aggression alongside anxiety, supplementation alone is insufficient; a combination of behavioural therapy and veterinary-supervised medication is required.