Does oral cannabidiol oil in adjunct to pain medications help reduce pain and improve locomotion in dogs with osteoarthritis?

Question In dogs with osteoarthritis (OA), does the oral supplementation of cannabidiol (CBD) oil, compared to conventional treatment alone, improve treatment outcomes of reducing pain and improving locomotion?   Clinical bottom line The category of research question was: Treatment. The...

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Main Authors: Tracy Yeung, Eduardo Uquillas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: RCVS Knowledge 2025-03-01
Series:Veterinary Evidence
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Online Access:https://veterinaryevidence.org/index.php/ve/article/view/701
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author Tracy Yeung
Eduardo Uquillas
author_facet Tracy Yeung
Eduardo Uquillas
author_sort Tracy Yeung
collection DOAJ
description Question In dogs with osteoarthritis (OA), does the oral supplementation of cannabidiol (CBD) oil, compared to conventional treatment alone, improve treatment outcomes of reducing pain and improving locomotion?   Clinical bottom line The category of research question was: Treatment. The number and type of study designs that were critically appraised were: Four papers were critically reviewed. Two of the studies were prospective, randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind, cross-over clinical trials. One trial was a prospective clinical trial. One study was a prospective, randomised, controlled, clinical trial. Critical appraisal of the selected papers meeting the inclusion criteria collectively provide zero/weak/moderate/strong evidence in terms of their experimental design and implementation: Weak. The outcomes reported are summarised as follows… The analgesic effect of CBD oil supplementation on dogs with OA, as assessed by different parameters. These parameters included pain scoring systems (Canine Brief Pain Inventory (CBPI): comprised of the Pain Severity Score and Pain Interference Score (PIS), Liverpool Osteoarthritis in Dogs (LOAD), and veterinarian assessment), activity assessments (Hudson activity scale, Activities of Daily Living (ADLs): based on Cincinnati Orthopaedic Disability Index (CODI), informal gait analysis, and objective gait analysis), and Quality of Life Index (QoL). In view of the strength of evidence and the outcomes from the studies the following conclusion is made… CBD oil oral supplementation displayed a significant effect of extra pain relief on top of conventional treatment of canine OA in the clinical trials based on subjective pain assessments. However, the only study that evaluated pain and activity using objective measurements did not show significant improvements between treatment groups; therefore, the evidence supporting its use as an adjuvant to conventional therapy remains weak. Further studies utilising objective measurements are needed to improve the strength of the supporting evidence for a general use of CBD oil as additional analgesia for dogs with OA.
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spelling doaj-art-7cbad65d8c0041e98ce2c367f97ee1c82025-08-20T02:49:36ZengRCVS KnowledgeVeterinary Evidence2396-97762025-03-0110110.18849/ve.v10i1.701554Does oral cannabidiol oil in adjunct to pain medications help reduce pain and improve locomotion in dogs with osteoarthritis?Tracy Yeung0https://orcid.org/0009-0005-7664-0770Eduardo Uquillas1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4227-2173The University Sydney School of Veterinary ScienceUniversity Veterinary Teaching Hospital Camden, AustraliaQuestion In dogs with osteoarthritis (OA), does the oral supplementation of cannabidiol (CBD) oil, compared to conventional treatment alone, improve treatment outcomes of reducing pain and improving locomotion?   Clinical bottom line The category of research question was: Treatment. The number and type of study designs that were critically appraised were: Four papers were critically reviewed. Two of the studies were prospective, randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind, cross-over clinical trials. One trial was a prospective clinical trial. One study was a prospective, randomised, controlled, clinical trial. Critical appraisal of the selected papers meeting the inclusion criteria collectively provide zero/weak/moderate/strong evidence in terms of their experimental design and implementation: Weak. The outcomes reported are summarised as follows… The analgesic effect of CBD oil supplementation on dogs with OA, as assessed by different parameters. These parameters included pain scoring systems (Canine Brief Pain Inventory (CBPI): comprised of the Pain Severity Score and Pain Interference Score (PIS), Liverpool Osteoarthritis in Dogs (LOAD), and veterinarian assessment), activity assessments (Hudson activity scale, Activities of Daily Living (ADLs): based on Cincinnati Orthopaedic Disability Index (CODI), informal gait analysis, and objective gait analysis), and Quality of Life Index (QoL). In view of the strength of evidence and the outcomes from the studies the following conclusion is made… CBD oil oral supplementation displayed a significant effect of extra pain relief on top of conventional treatment of canine OA in the clinical trials based on subjective pain assessments. However, the only study that evaluated pain and activity using objective measurements did not show significant improvements between treatment groups; therefore, the evidence supporting its use as an adjuvant to conventional therapy remains weak. Further studies utilising objective measurements are needed to improve the strength of the supporting evidence for a general use of CBD oil as additional analgesia for dogs with OA.https://veterinaryevidence.org/index.php/ve/article/view/701analgesiacannabidiolcannabinoidcannabiscaninechronic paindegenerative joint diseaseosteoarthritispain managementpain relief
spellingShingle Tracy Yeung
Eduardo Uquillas
Does oral cannabidiol oil in adjunct to pain medications help reduce pain and improve locomotion in dogs with osteoarthritis?
Veterinary Evidence
analgesia
cannabidiol
cannabinoid
cannabis
canine
chronic pain
degenerative joint disease
osteoarthritis
pain management
pain relief
title Does oral cannabidiol oil in adjunct to pain medications help reduce pain and improve locomotion in dogs with osteoarthritis?
title_full Does oral cannabidiol oil in adjunct to pain medications help reduce pain and improve locomotion in dogs with osteoarthritis?
title_fullStr Does oral cannabidiol oil in adjunct to pain medications help reduce pain and improve locomotion in dogs with osteoarthritis?
title_full_unstemmed Does oral cannabidiol oil in adjunct to pain medications help reduce pain and improve locomotion in dogs with osteoarthritis?
title_short Does oral cannabidiol oil in adjunct to pain medications help reduce pain and improve locomotion in dogs with osteoarthritis?
title_sort does oral cannabidiol oil in adjunct to pain medications help reduce pain and improve locomotion in dogs with osteoarthritis
topic analgesia
cannabidiol
cannabinoid
cannabis
canine
chronic pain
degenerative joint disease
osteoarthritis
pain management
pain relief
url https://veterinaryevidence.org/index.php/ve/article/view/701
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AT eduardouquillas doesoralcannabidioloilinadjuncttopainmedicationshelpreducepainandimprovelocomotionindogswithosteoarthritis