What Your Dog’s Gut Is Trying to Tell You
Categories: Raw Feeding · Canine Nutrition · Dog Health
Reading time: 6 min
| “The health of everything begins in the gut. This is as true for your dog as it is for you.” |
If your dog suffers from recurring allergies, chronic skin issues, digestive problems or unexplained inflammation, the answer may not lie in the next prescription or the next hypoallergenic kibble. Furthermore, it may not even lie in a supplement. It may lie in something far more fundamental: the trillions of microorganisms living in your dog’s digestive tract.
This is what science is beginning to confirm, and what holistic animal practitioners have understood for years. Additionally, a landmark 2024 study from Oklahoma State University, published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science, has now provided the clearest evidence yet of just how profoundly diet shapes your dog’s gut and therefore their entire immune system.
What the Science Actually Shows
Researchers at Oklahoma State University studied 55 dogs over 28 days. Half were fed a commercial kibble diet. The other half were fed a raw food diet. The results were striking.
| Raw-Fed Dogs | Kibble-Fed Dogs |
| Significantly higher gut microbiome diversity | Reduced microbiome diversity |
| More microbial species present | Fewer species overall |
| Higher ecological richness | Lower ecological richness |
| Higher fecal IgA, IgG, alkaline phosphatase | Lower immune markers |
| Stronger local gut immune function | Weaker local gut immune function |
Furthermore, a 2025 systematic review published in PMC confirmed that diet is the single strongest driver of gut microbiome composition more powerful than genetics, more powerful than environment, and more powerful than medication history.
In other words: what goes into your dog’s bowl every single day is the most important health decision you make for them.
Why the Gut Is Everything
You may have heard the phrase “70–80% of the immune system lives in the gut.” This is not a wellness catchphrase, it is a well-established physiological fact. The gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) is the largest immune organ in the body, and it relies entirely on a healthy, diverse microbiome to function correctly.
| Healthy Diverse Gut | Disrupted Gut |
| Warmer, more responsive immune system | Allergies and chronic skin issues |
| More intelligent immune responses | Chronic inflammation |
| Better nutrient absorption | Hyper-reactivity to food and environment |
| Reduced inflammatory response | Leaky gut and food sensitivities |
| Stronger long-term disease resistance | Increased autoimmune risk |
When the gut microbiome is disrupted through processed food, repeated antibiotic use, chronic stress or a diet low in natural fibre and live organisms, the immune system loses its most important training ground. As a result, it either under-responds (missing real threats) or over-responds (attacking harmless substances like food proteins or pollen).
This is exactly what we see clinically in dogs with recurring allergies, chronic ear infections, skin conditions that never fully resolve, and digestive issues that cycle through periods of remission and flare. Consequently, the root cause is rarely the symptom itself, it is the gut that needs healing first.
What This Means for Your Dog’s Bowl
The Oklahoma State study used a standardised raw diet for 28 days. However, you do not need a perfectly formulated raw diet to begin supporting your dog’s gut health. Even partial changes make a measurable difference.
- Replace one kibble meal per day with a species-appropriate fresh food meal
- Add a quality probiotic to every meal, this directly seeds the microbiome
- Include raw or lightly cooked vegetables, natural prebiotics that feed beneficial bacteria
- Add Omega 3 fatty acids directly reduces gut inflammation
- Avoid unnecessary antibiotics each course significantly disrupts the microbiome for months
- Reduce ultra-processed treats most commercial treats contain the same inflammatory ingredients as poor-quality kibble
| The goal is not perfection. The goal is progress — moving your dog’s diet closer to what their biology was designed to eat, one meal at a time. |
How to Know if Your Dog’s Gut Needs Support
Many of the signs of poor gut health are ones we have been conditioned to accept as normal. However, they are not normal they are signals. Watch for:
- Recurring skin issues, hot spots or chronic itching
- Frequent ear infections, often a sign of systemic yeast or food sensitivity
- Loose or inconsistent stools
- Excessive gas or bloating after meals
- Grass eating, often a sign of digestive discomfort
- Allergies that seem to get worse each season despite treatment
- Low energy or sluggishness without obvious cause
Where to Start
If you are ready to take a more intentional approach to your dog’s nutrition, the best first step is understanding exactly what your dog needs, not in general terms, but specifically for their weight, life stage, breed and health status.
| Free Tool — Raw Feeding Calculator Our free Raw Feeding Calculator gives you an instant daily feeding amount based on your dog’s current weight and life stage. No guesswork, no overfeeding, no hidden gaps. It is the simplest first step toward a gut-supportive diet. Access it free here: |
For a fully personalised, species-specific raw meal plan that checks all 24 essential nutrients against NRC 2006 requirements with recipes, portion guides and nutritional breakdowns for every dog in your home, our Canine NutriCraft™ membership was built exactly for this.
Learn more about Canine NutriCraft™:
The Bottom Line
The science is clear. Diet is the single most powerful lever you have for your dog’s long-term health, more powerful than genetics, more powerful than supplements, more powerful than medication.
A diverse, thriving gut microbiome means a stronger immune system, better nutrient absorption, lower inflammation and a dog who feels well from the inside out. Furthermore, the most reliable way to build that microbiome is through real, species-appropriate food.
Your dog cannot choose what goes in their bowl. However, you can. And every meal is an opportunity to move them closer to the health they deserve.
| References Sandri M, et al. (2024). Effects of raw vs commercial diet on canine gut microbiome. Frontiers in Veterinary Science Oklahoma State University. Systematic review (2025). Diet as primary driver of gut microbiome composition in dogs. PubMed Central (PMC).National Research Council (2006). Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats. National Academies Press. |
| Rooted in Nature. Raised with Love. Jolandie Koen | The Holistic Pet |