Addison's Disease is a practical topic hub for pet owners, vet teams, and pre-vet learners because it connects day-to-day observations with triage thinking, common mistakes, species differences, and the kind of questions people search when something feels off at home.
Start at your level — or read all three. Each level links to the others so you can go deeper or share with someone who needs the basics.
A practical plain-English lesson on addison's disease, including what you may notice at home, when to call a veterinarian now, what to avoid, and how to use the page again when the same concern comes back.
Read Pet Owner LevelA clinic-focused lesson on addison's disease, emphasizing intake details, escalation triggers, monitoring priorities, client communication, and repeat-use workflow pearls for the veterinary team.
Read Vet Tech LevelA deeper study lesson on addison's disease with mechanism, species differences, differential framing, mini-cases, and board-style reasoning designed for pre-vet learners.
Read Pre-Vet LevelUseful for all levels — bookmark this page for quick access.
| 🚨 | collapse, weakness, or tremors |
| 🚨 | persistent vomiting or diarrhea with lethargy |
| 🚨 | marked increase or decrease in drinking plus illness |
| 🚨 | fruity breath or severe weakness in a diabetic patient |
| ❌ | changing insulin dose on guesswork alone |
| ❌ | using human supplements without asking |
| ❌ | equating good appetite with good control |
| ❌ | missing subtle weight or water-intake trends |
| dogs | dogs with hyperadrenocorticism often show classic PU/PD and abdominal changes |
| cats | cats with diabetes may present with neuropathy or weight loss |
| exotics | exotics can have husbandry-related metabolic disease rather than classic small-animal endocrine patterns |
| pattern | Watch for changes in thirst, urination, and appetite. |
| track | Measure water intake if asked and track appetite and body weight weekly. |
| bring | A short timeline, medication list, and photos or video if safe. |
| myth | Endocrine disease always looks dramatic from the beginning |
| reality | Many endocrine disorders build slowly and only become obvious after patterns have been ignored for weeks or months. |
| ask | Has drinking or urination changed? Is the pet eating but losing weight? |
Follow the latest in animal health, FDA approvals, outbreak watch, clinical guidance, and new research—translated into practical takeaways you can actually understand.