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    Senior dog egg intolerance & vomiting fix

    This is a specific conversation about Dog food allergies — identifying and fixing them — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    A senior dog suddenly reacting to a food they've eaten for years is actually pretty common — digestive tolerance often shifts in older dogs, and egg is one of the proteins that can become a problem later in life. True food allergies are less common than intolerances, but the practical fix is largely the same: remove the offending ingredient and give the gut time to settle. The most reliable way to do that is an elimination diet using a novel or hydrolysed protein food with no egg in the ingredients. To point you in the right direction — what breed mix is your dog exactly, how old are they, what symptoms are you seeing beyond the vomiting, and have you already ruled out anything else with your vet?
    She's a 14-year-old Poodle cross, about 9kg. She's been vomiting most mornings after breakfast for the past three weeks. Vet checked her out and ruled out anything serious — bloods were fine. They mentioned it could be a food intolerance. She's currently on a chicken and egg complete wet food.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a really helpful picture. If the vet has cleared her medically and the vomiting is reliably happening after breakfast, removing egg is the obvious first move — and the timing matters too. Morning vomiting in older dogs can sometimes be linked to the stomach sitting empty overnight, so the texture and richness of the food plays a role. Chicken itself is fine for most dogs, but since she's been on it a long time it's worth switching protein too, just to be thorough. At 14 she'll also benefit from a senior-specific formula with lower phosphorus to support kidney function. Has she had any other symptoms — loose stools, itchy skin, or is it purely the vomiting?
    Just the vomiting, nothing else. Her stools are normal and her skin is fine. She's still eating happily and seems her usual self otherwise.
    inparticular.ai
    Good — isolated post-meal vomiting with no other symptoms and a clean bill of health from the vet really does point toward a dietary intolerance rather than anything systemic. My recommendation would be Forthglade Complete Meal Senior — specifically the turkey or lamb varieties, both of which are egg-free and use a single, novel protein she won't have built up a reaction to. It's a gently cooked wet food with a soft texture, which is easier on an older dog's digestion, and the senior recipe has the right nutrient balance for a 14-year-old. Try splitting her daily portion into two smaller meals — morning and early evening — rather than one breakfast sitting. That alone can reduce morning vomiting in older dogs whose stomachs empty slowly overnight. Give it four weeks before drawing conclusions. You'll find it on Amazon UK in multipacks.
    View Forthglade Complete Meal on Amazon
    That sounds sensible. Should I transition her gradually or switch straight away since we're trying to identify the problem?
    inparticular.ai
    Good question. Because she's already having digestive issues, a gradual transition over five to seven days is the safer approach — start with about 25% new food mixed with 75% current food and shift the ratio every couple of days. Going cold turkey on a sensitive senior gut can cause loose stools and make it harder to tell what's actually helping. Once she's fully on the new food, keep a simple log of whether vomiting occurs and when — that pattern will tell you a lot. If she's still vomiting after four weeks on the new food, go back to the vet with that diary. But my honest expectation is that removing egg and splitting the meals will sort this.
    Really helpful, thank you. I'll order the Forthglade turkey senior and try the split meals approach.
    inparticular.ai
    That sounds like a solid plan. Turkey is a good starting point — it's lean, easily digestible, and about as far from egg as you can get protein-wise. Keep an eye on her weight too over the first month, as senior dogs can lose condition quietly when their food changes. If she stays bright, eating well, and the vomiting stops, you'll have your answer. Hope she's feeling better soon — 14 and still eating enthusiastically is a good sign.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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