Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega Review

A fish-oil liquid with clear per-pump omega-3 numbers, weight-band dosing, and several quality claims that deserve a closer label read.

La Petite Labs Editorial 1 min read

Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega is a fish-flavor liquid pet fish oil supplement for dogs and cats. The reviewed SKU is the 8 Ounce liquid, ASIN B005JW2RS2, model or part number 410611. The label presents it as a once-daily oil mixed with a pet's meal, with dosing by weight from 1/2 pump to 4 pumps per day.

The strongest buyer-facing part of this label is the disclosed per-pump math: one 1 mL pump provides 1000 mg fish oil, including minimums of 180 mg EPA and 120 mg DHA, plus vitamins A, D3, and E. That makes it easier to discuss the product with a veterinarian than a fish oil that only lists total oil.

The harder part is purchase and verification transparency. The page we checked did not show a current featured offer price, servings per container, inactive ingredients, a public COA, a lot lookup, or named lab results. This review treats Triglyceride Omega as a potentially practical fish-oil option whose public label gives useful dose numbers, while leaving several buyer questions to verify before checkout.

We reviewed Vetoquinol USA at brand level — Public Transparency Score 51/100 — see the Vetoquinol USA Review for the brand's testing posture, disclosure practices, and what to verify before buying anything from its range.

Disclosure: La Petite Labs sells its own pet supplements, including its daily systems. This review is editorial: competitor facts are drawn from the public sources listed in the References section, and facts are dated where shown.

What Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega Is And Which Pets The Label Covers

Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega is presented as a pet fish oil nutritional supplement for dogs and cats. The reviewed variant is the 8 Ounce liquid in fish flavor, listed with ASIN B005JW2RS2 and model or part number 410611. The source page identifies the manufacturer as Vetoquinol and the item form as liquid, with a unit count of 8 fluid ounces. Other variants shown for the product family include an 8 oz pack of 2 and 60 capsules, but this review focuses on the single 8 Ounce liquid pump SKU.

The label positions the product as an omega-3 liquid supplement made for daily use with food. It says Triglyceride OMEGA delivers essential omega-3 fatty acids to support health and well-being for active dogs and cats, and describes the fish oil as crafted from Atlantic sardines, mackerel, and anchovies. Those are brand and label claims rather than independent findings, so the practical buyer question is what the disclosed panel actually lets you evaluate.

On that front, the label is more specific than many oil products. It gives the total fish oil amount and EPA and DHA minimums per one 1 mL pump. It also discloses vitamin A, vitamin D3, and vitamin E minimums per pump, plus crude fat and moisture figures. The product is not presented as a drug, and the legal disclaimer says it is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Owners should read it as a supplemental fish oil for dogs and cats, not as a replacement for veterinary care or a complete diet.

At a Glance

What is Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega?

Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega is a fish-flavor liquid fish oil supplement for dogs and cats. The reviewed 8 Ounce SKU uses a pump, with one 1 mL pump providing 1000 mg fish oil, including minimums of 180 mg EPA and 120 mg DHA, plus vitamins A, D3, and E.

Product
Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega, 8 Ounce liquid, Fish flavor, ASIN B005JW2RS2, model/part number 410611
Category
Pet fish oil nutritional supplement
Species
Dogs and cats
Format
undefined
Disclosed actives
Per 1 mL pump: 1000 mg fish oil, 180 mg EPA, 120 mg DHA, 160 IU vitamin A, 40 IU vitamin D3, 1.6 IU vitamin E; guaranteed analysis lists 99% minimum crude fat and 0.10% maximum moisture.
Price
No current purchasable price found for the reviewed 8 Ounce SKU; page said no featured offers available, subscription price was not found, and servings per container were not disclosed, so cost per day cannot be calculated.
Best fit
Dog or cat owners who want a liquid fish oil with disclosed EPA and DHA amounts per pump and are willing to verify price, inactive ingredients, freshness, and lot-level quality details before use.
What to check
Confirm inactive ingredients, live price, servings or pump count, lot-specific testing or COA availability, best-by/storage details, and veterinarian fit for pets outside the 8-100 lb public dosing range or with medical, medication, allergy, pregnancy, nursing, pancreatitis, or weight-management concerns.

Quick Answers

Is Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega good?

It has a useful label for buyers who want per-pump EPA and DHA numbers and weight-band dosing for dogs and cats. The main caveat is public transparency: price, servings per container, inactive ingredients, a public COA, lot lookup, named lab, and lot-specific contaminant results were not easy to find publicly on the page checked.

What should owners check before buying Triglyceride Omega?

Check the live price, servings or pump count per 8 Ounce bottle, inactive ingredients, best-by date, storage directions after opening, and whether lot-specific contaminant or freshness results are available. Also confirm your pet's weight band, especially if the pet is under 8 lbs, over 100 lbs, pregnant, nursing, medicated, medically managed, or allergy-prone.

What cautions or side effects should owners watch for?

The label says to discontinue use and consult a veterinarian immediately if irritation or an adverse reaction occurs. It also says not to use the product on animals allergic to any ingredients and to consult a veterinarian before use, especially for pregnant or nursing pets, pets with medical conditions, or pets taking medications.

How much EPA and DHA does Triglyceride Omega provide per day?

Per one 1 mL pump, the label lists 180 mg EPA and 120 mg DHA. By weight band, that is 90 mg EPA and 60 mg DHA at 1/2 pump, 180 mg EPA and 120 mg DHA at one pump, 360 mg EPA and 240 mg DHA at two pumps, 540 mg EPA and 360 mg DHA at three pumps, and 720 mg EPA and 480 mg DHA at four pumps.

How much does Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega cost per day?

Cost per day cannot be calculated from the public page checked. The reviewed 8 Ounce SKU showed no featured offers available, no subscription price was found, and servings per container were not disclosed. A buyer needs a live bottle price and pump or serving count before doing daily cost math by weight band.

Does Triglyceride Omega publish third-party testing or a COA?

The page includes NASC Quality Seal language, NASC member language, an audit claim, and contaminant absence claims for mercury, lead, and PCBs. A public COA, lot lookup, named lab, and lot-specific contaminant panel results were not easy to find publicly on the pages checked.

Is Triglyceride Omega for both dogs and cats?

Yes. The product is presented for dogs and cats, and the directions use animal weight bands from 8-19 lbs through 80-100 lbs. The public directions do not show a dose for animals under 8 lbs or over 100 lbs, so those pets need veterinarian or manufacturer guidance.

Does Triglyceride Omega treat itchy skin?

The label says the supplement can help support itchy skin for a healthy coat and healthy skin, but it also says the product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. Owners dealing with persistent itch, skin injury, infections, or recurring symptoms should use the claim as a discussion point with a veterinarian, not as a diagnosis or treatment plan.

Before You Buy

Five things to verify about Triglyceride OMEGA

VerifyWhy it mattersWhat we found
Can I see a current price and calculate cost per day for my pet's weight band?The label dose ranges from 1/2 pump to four pumps daily, so larger animals may use the bottle much faster than smaller animals.A current purchasable price for the reviewed 8 Ounce SKU was not easy to find publicly when we checked; the page said no featured offers were available, and subscription price was not found.
Are the inactive ingredients disclosed for this exact liquid SKU?Dogs and cats with allergies or sensitivities may react to flavors, carriers, preservatives, or other non-active ingredients, and the warning says not to use the product on animals allergic to any ingredients.Inactive ingredients were not easy to find publicly when we checked. The page identified fish flavor and disclosed active amounts, but it did not provide a full inactive-ingredient list.
Is there a public COA, lot lookup, named lab, or lot-specific contaminant result?Fish oils commonly raise buyer questions about contaminants and freshness, and this page makes contaminant absence claims for mercury, lead, and PCBs.A public COA, lot lookup, named lab, and lot-specific contaminant panel results were not easy to find publicly when we checked. The page did include NASC Quality Seal language and contaminant absence claims.
How many servings or pump doses are in the 8 Ounce bottle?Serving count determines how long the bottle lasts at 1/2, one, two, three, or four pumps per day, and it is necessary for value comparison.Servings per container were not easy to find publicly when we checked. The bottle size was listed as 8 Ounce and one pump was defined as 1 mL, but a serving count was not disclosed.
Does the USP ingredient verification sentence apply to this exact product?The page includes a USP ingredient verification sentence tied to AllerG-3, and buyers may reasonably want to know whether that quality claim applies to the reviewed Triglyceride Omega SKU.The page included the statement that AllerG-3 contains the only fish oil to achieve USP ingredient verification, but its relationship to this Triglyceride Omega liquid SKU was not easy to clarify publicly when we checked.

Competitor label and pricing facts checked July 4, 2026. Sources are listed in the References section below.

Why The 1 mL Pump Format Is The Main Appeal Here

The clearest appeal of Triglyceride Omega is convenience paired with disclosed pump math. The product is a liquid that the label says to feed orally and mix with a pet's meal once daily. For owners who dislike softgels, capsules, or measuring spoons, a pump can be easier to repeat every day, especially when the label gives weight bands instead of leaving the owner to invent a serving size.

The label's dosing range also spans both smaller and larger animals. Pets weighing 8-19 lbs receive 1/2 pump per day, 20-39 lbs receive one pump, 40-59 lbs receive two pumps, 60-79 lbs receive three pumps, and 80-100 lbs receive four pumps. That makes the product more immediately readable for many dog owners and for cats or small dogs that fall into the lowest listed weight band. The reviewed label does not publish directions for animals under 8 lbs or over 100 lbs, so those pets need veterinarian-specific instructions rather than owner extrapolation.

The other appeal is that the label identifies EPA and DHA separately. Each 1 mL pump provides 1000 mg fish oil with minimums of 180 mg EPA and 120 mg DHA. That means the owner can tell a veterinarian the actual labeled EPA and DHA intake at the pet's weight band. A product that only says "fish oil" may be harder to evaluate, because total oil is not the same as EPA plus DHA. Triglyceride Omega still leaves important questions open, including inactive ingredients, price, servings per container, and public lot testing, but the basic active-dose disclosure is useful.

Every Number Published On The Triglyceride Omega Label

The key disclosed serving unit is one pump, defined on the label as 1 mL. One 1 mL pump provides 1000 mg of fish oil. Within that pump, the label lists Eicosapentaenoic acid, or EPA, at a minimum of 180 mg and Docosahexaenoic acid, or DHA, at a minimum of 120 mg. Together, those two named omega-3 fatty acids add up to 300 mg minimum EPA plus DHA per 1 mL pump, based only on the label's stated minimums.

The label also lists three vitamins per pump. Vitamin A is disclosed at a minimum of 160 IU per 1 mL pump. Vitamin D3 is disclosed at a minimum of 40 IU per 1 mL pump. Vitamin E is disclosed at a minimum of 1.6 IU per 1 mL pump. These additions matter because a buyer may be thinking only about fish oil, but the product is not just EPA and DHA on the public label. Pets already receiving other supplements or therapeutic diets may have overlapping vitamin intake, which is one reason the label's veterinarian-consultation instruction is not just boilerplate.

The guaranteed analysis lists Crude Fat at a minimum of 99% and Moisture at a maximum of 0.10%. That is consistent with an oil-style supplement presentation, but it also flags a practical caution: this is a fat-dense add-on. The reviewed public page did not show calories per pump, so calorie budgeting cannot be done from the visible label information alone. The same page did not disclose inactive ingredients, servings per container, life stage or age floor, or a current purchasable price for the reviewed 8 Ounce SKU.

What The Public Page Does Not Make Easy To Verify

The most important missing buyer detail is price. The reviewed 8 Ounce SKU showed no featured offers available, so there was no current purchasable price to use for cost-per-day math. A subscription price was not found either. Because servings per container were also not disclosed, a buyer cannot calculate a reliable day count or monthly cost from the public page alone.

Several label-comfort details were also not easy to find publicly. Inactive ingredients were not disclosed in the reviewed text. That matters for pets with ingredient sensitivities or owners trying to avoid specific flavors, preservatives, or carriers. The page identifies fish flavor and fish oil, and it says the fish oil is crafted from Atlantic sardines, mackerel, and anchovies, but it does not provide a full inactive-ingredient list in the material checked.

The public quality record is also incomplete for a cautious buyer. The brand describes the oil as having no mercury, lead, or PCBs and references NASC Quality Seal and audit language. However, a public COA, lot lookup, named lab, and lot-specific contaminant panel results were not easy to find publicly on the pages checked. That does not prove those records do not exist; it means the buyer cannot independently review them from the visible page.

Other missing items include a life stage or age floor, directions for animals under 8 lbs or over 100 lbs, and any clarification around a USP ingredient verification sentence that appears to refer to AllerG-3. Those are good questions for the seller or veterinarian before using the product in a sensitive pet.

Pump-By-Pump EPA And DHA Math By Weight Band

The dosing math is straightforward because the label gives a serving unit and active amounts per serving. One pump equals 1 mL and provides 1000 mg fish oil, including minimums of 180 mg EPA and 120 mg DHA. For animals weighing 8-19 lbs, the label says to give 1/2 pump per day. That equals 0.5 mL daily, 500 mg fish oil, 90 mg EPA, 60 mg DHA, 80 IU vitamin A, 20 IU vitamin D3, and 0.8 IU vitamin E, using direct proportional math from the label's one-pump figures.

For animals weighing 20-39 lbs, the label says one pump daily. That equals the full disclosed per-pump amount: 1 mL, 1000 mg fish oil, 180 mg EPA, 120 mg DHA, 160 IU vitamin A, 40 IU vitamin D3, and 1.6 IU vitamin E. For 40-59 lbs, the label says two pumps daily. That equals 2 mL, 2000 mg fish oil, 360 mg EPA, 240 mg DHA, 320 IU vitamin A, 80 IU vitamin D3, and 3.2 IU vitamin E.

For 60-79 lbs, the label says three pumps daily. That equals 3 mL, 3000 mg fish oil, 540 mg EPA, 360 mg DHA, 480 IU vitamin A, 120 IU vitamin D3, and 4.8 IU vitamin E. For 80-100 lbs, the label says four pumps daily. That equals 4 mL, 4000 mg fish oil, 720 mg EPA, 480 mg DHA, 640 IU vitamin A, 160 IU vitamin D3, and 6.4 IU vitamin E.

This math does not decide whether the dose is right for a specific dog or cat. It simply turns the public label into a veterinarian-ready intake estimate.

“The useful part of this label is the 1 mL pump math; the missing part is the public lot-level proof many cautious fish-oil buyers want.”

Fat Load, Calories, And Pancreatitis-Prone Pets

Triglyceride Omega is an oil supplement, and the guaranteed analysis lists Crude Fat at 99% minimum. That is not a flaw by itself; fish oils are fat-based by nature. It does mean the product should be treated as a meaningful dietary add-on, especially for pets on weight-managed plans, pets with a history of fat sensitivity, or pets whose veterinarian has advised careful fat control.

The public page checked did not disclose calories per pump. Without calories, an owner cannot accurately fold the oil into a daily calorie budget from the visible label alone. The dose still adds fat: 1/2 pump is half of the listed 1 mL pump, while the largest labeled band uses four pumps daily. For a small animal, even a small volume can matter if the diet is tightly managed. For a larger dog, several pumps can become a routine addition that should be accounted for alongside treats, toppers, and other supplements.

The label includes broad safety language that helps frame use. It says the product is for animal use only, should be kept out of reach of children and pets, should not be used on animals allergic to any ingredients, and should be discontinued with veterinary consultation if irritation or an adverse reaction occurs. It also says to consult a veterinarian before use, especially if the pet is pregnant, nursing, has a medical condition, or is taking other medications.

For pancreatitis-prone, weight-managed, medically complex, pregnant, nursing, or medicated dogs and cats, the conservative move is to ask the veterinarian whether any added fish oil is appropriate and, if so, whether the labeled pump amount fits the pet's current diet and risk profile.

Freshness, Oxidation, And The Storage Instruction Buyers Actually Get

Fish oil freshness matters because oils can degrade with heat, light, air exposure, and time. The public label gives one storage instruction: store in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight. That is useful, but it is a minimum handling instruction rather than a full freshness system. The page checked did not publish peroxide values, anisidine values, total oxidation values, a lot-specific freshness result, a best-by example, or a lot lookup that would let a buyer review freshness testing before use.

The pump format can be convenient because it reduces measuring friction, but it also creates practical questions. Buyers should check that the pump dispenses consistently, that the bottle is not leaking, and that the oil's smell and appearance seem acceptable when opened. The label does not provide owner-facing sensory standards, so any unusual change after opening should be treated cautiously rather than rationalized.

The brand says the oil has no mercury, lead, or PCBs, and it names mercury, lead, and PCBs as contaminant concerns in the public claims. That is a relevant quality claim for marine oils, but the page checked did not publish a public COA, lot lookup, named lab, or lot-specific contaminant panel result. For buyers who want documented freshness and contaminant results, that is the gap to ask about before purchase.

Once opened, owners should follow the package storage directions and any veterinarian or seller guidance. If a pet refuses the food, develops an adverse reaction, or the oil appears compromised, the practical next step is to pause use and contact the veterinarian or seller rather than continuing through uncertainty.

Using One Bottle Across Dogs And Cats In Real Homes

The product is labeled for both dogs and cats, and that can be useful in a mixed-pet household. The same public directions say to feed orally, mix with the pet's meal once daily, and dose by weight. For animals weighing 8-19 lbs, the dose is 1/2 pump per day; for 20-39 lbs, one pump; for 40-59 lbs, two pumps; for 60-79 lbs, three pumps; and for 80-100 lbs, four pumps.

For many cats, the lowest listed band may be the relevant public direction, but the label does not publish a direction for animals under 8 lbs. Some cats, small dogs, seniors, or underweight pets may fall outside the visible bands or may have medical reasons to use a different plan. In those cases, the label's own instruction to consult a veterinarian before giving Triglyceride Omega becomes especially important.

The fish flavor may be a plus for pets that like marine flavors, but the public page does not disclose inactive ingredients. For a pet with allergies or suspected sensitivities, "fish flavor" is not enough information to clear the product. The page does say not to use the product on animals allergic to any ingredients, so a complete ingredient check is part of responsible use.

Households with more than one pet should also think about dosing control. A pump bottle mixed into meals is only accurate if each pet gets its own measured portion and does not eat another pet's food. The product should also be kept out of reach of children and pets, as the label says, because a palatable oil bottle should not be accessible for unsupervised intake.

NASC Seal Language, Contaminant Claims, And Missing Lot Proof

Triglyceride Omega carries several public quality signals. The page includes National Animal Supplement Council Quality Seal language and says Vetoquinol is a proud member of the National Animal Supplement Council. It also says that, to display the NASC Quality Seal, the company undergoes regular and rigorous audits. Those are meaningful buyer-facing signals, especially compared with products that offer no quality framework at all.

The brand also describes Triglyceride Omega as a natural triglyceride fish oil with no mercury, lead, or PCBs. For a marine oil supplement, those are important contaminants to address. The label's mention of mercury, lead, and PCBs gives buyers a clear list of what the brand is claiming around contaminant absence.

The limitation is that the public page checked does not show the underlying documents a skeptical buyer might want. A public certificate of analysis was not easy to find. A lot lookup was not easy to find. A named laboratory was not easy to find. Lot-specific contaminant panel results were not easy to find. The audit language is stated, but the page does not publish an audit report. None of that proves the product lacks testing; it means the public page asks the buyer to rely on the label and quality-seal language rather than reviewing lot-level evidence directly.

One additional wrinkle is that the page contains an AllerG-3 USP ingredient verification sentence. The statement is captured on the public page, but the page does not clarify its relationship to the reviewed Triglyceride Omega SKU. Buyers who care about that claim should ask the seller or manufacturer whether it applies to this exact bottle.

What The Evidence Supports And Where The Claims Stay Broad

The public claims for Triglyceride Omega are mostly structure-function style claims. The label says the supplement supports health and well-being, healthy skin and coat, immune system responses, muscle and bone health support through vitamin D3, heart and skin health through vitamin E, and healthy skin, coat, joint function, heart health, and kidney health through EPA and DHA omega-3 fatty acids. It also says the product can help support itchy skin for a healthy coat and healthy skin.

Those claims should be read carefully. The page's legal disclaimer says the statements have not been evaluated by the FDA and that the product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. That matters because skin, coat, joint, heart, kidney, and itch language can sound medical to owners dealing with real symptoms. A fish oil may be part of a veterinarian's broader plan, but the public page does not turn this product into a treatment for a diagnosed condition.

The brand also says the oil is in triglyceride form and has been shown to be more bioavailable than ethyl ester or free fatty acid forms. The page checked does not provide a study citation with that statement. It also includes a broad line that ongoing research has shown omega-3 fatty acids naturally support healthy kidney, heart, and joint function while promoting mobility and flexibility. That is category-level research framing, not a published finished-product clinical trial for this exact SKU.

The fair read is balanced: the label discloses EPA and DHA amounts, and omega-3 fish oils are a familiar supplement category, but buyers should not treat the page as proof of disease outcomes for their individual dog or cat.

“Triglyceride Omega is easiest to evaluate as a disclosed-dose fish oil, not as a complete skin plan or a substitute for veterinary care.”

Why Daily Cost Cannot Be Calculated From This Listing

The reviewed 8 Ounce Triglyceride Omega listing did not show a current purchasable price. The price field said no featured offers were available. A subscription price was not found. Servings per container were also not disclosed. Because of those missing details, cost per day by weight band cannot be calculated honestly from the public page checked.

The arithmetic that would be needed is simple, but the inputs are missing. For an 8-19 lb animal using 1/2 pump per day, daily cost would require a bottle price and the total number of 1/2-pump days available. For a 20-39 lb animal using one pump per day, it would require price divided by the number of one-pump servings. For 40-59 lbs, 60-79 lbs, and 80-100 lbs, the same price would be divided across two, three, or four pumps per day. Without a verified price and a reliable pump count or serving count, any dollar estimate would be invented.

This is especially important for larger dogs. The largest public band uses four pumps daily, which will use a bottle faster than the one-pump band. Even if a bottle looks affordable at checkout, the real value depends on how many days it lasts at the pet's actual weight band. For cats and small dogs in the 8-19 lb band, the labeled 1/2 pump dose may stretch the bottle longer, but the exact duration still cannot be confirmed from the public serving information provided.

Before buying, shoppers should capture the live price, confirm the bottle size, check the pump count or servings per container if available, and then calculate daily cost using the pet's labeled weight band.

Who Triglyceride Omega Genuinely Fits

Triglyceride Omega is a reasonable product to consider for owners who specifically want a liquid fish oil for a dog or cat and want EPA and DHA amounts printed per pump. The label's one-pump disclosure makes it easier to communicate with a veterinarian: 1000 mg fish oil, 180 mg EPA, 120 mg DHA, 160 IU vitamin A, 40 IU vitamin D3, and 1.6 IU vitamin E per 1 mL pump. Owners can multiply those amounts by the public weight-band directions instead of trying to decode vague omega language.

It may also fit households that prefer mixing supplements into meals. The label says to feed orally and mix with the pet's meal once daily. For pets that accept fish flavor and eat measured meals reliably, the pump format can be straightforward. It is less ideal for free-feeding households, pets that share bowls, or pets that reject fish-scented toppers.

The product is also a stronger fit for buyers who value NASC Quality Seal and NASC member language but do not require public lot-level documents before buying. The page includes those quality signals and contaminant absence claims for mercury, lead, and PCBs. At the same time, buyers who require a public COA, lot lookup, named lab, or published lot-specific contaminant results may find the public information too thin.

This product is not a complete multivitamin, a full skin-care system, or a stand-alone plan for a symptomatic pet. It is best understood as a fish-oil supplement with useful active disclosure and several public verification gaps that should be resolved before use in sensitive dogs or cats.

Pets That Should Get A Vet Check Before This Oil

The label itself says to consult your veterinarian before giving your pet Triglyceride Omega. It also says to consult a veterinarian before use especially if the pet is pregnant, nursing, has a medical condition, or is taking other medications. Those are the clearest groups that should not start casually from an online label alone.

A veterinarian check is also prudent for pets with known ingredient allergies or suspected sensitivities. The warning says not to use the product on animals allergic to any ingredients, but inactive ingredients were not disclosed in the public text checked. If the pet has reacted to fish, flavorings, oils, preservatives, or supplement carriers before, the owner needs a complete ingredient confirmation before feeding.

Pets on fat-controlled diets deserve extra caution. The guaranteed analysis lists Crude Fat at 99% minimum, and calories per pump were not published on the page checked. Dogs or cats with a history of pancreatitis, pets under strict weight management, or pets whose veterinarian has restricted dietary fat should have the oil and dose reviewed before it is added to meals.

Pets outside the visible dose bands should also be handled individually. The public directions start at 8 lbs and end at 100 lbs. An animal under 8 lbs, over 100 lbs, growing, frail, underweight, or medically unstable may need a different instruction or may not be an appropriate candidate. If irritation or an adverse reaction occurs, the label says to discontinue use and consult the veterinarian immediately. That is the practical stopping rule owners should follow rather than pushing through a concerning response.

Fish Oil Is A Different Job Than A Skin Barrier System

Triglyceride Omega is an omega-3 fish oil. Its label centers on fish oil, EPA, DHA, and added vitamins A, D3, and E. That job is different from a skin barrier system, a broader dermatology supplement, or a multivitamin. A buyer should not expect one category to do the other category's work just because both may appear in a skin-and-coat shopping search.

The brand says Triglyceride Omega supports healthy skin and coat, itchy skin support, joint function, heart health, kidney health, immune response, muscle and bone health, and general well-being. Those are broad support claims for a fish-oil supplement. The label does not make the product a complete plan for a pet with chronic itch, recurring skin problems, ear issues, allergies, or a diagnosed medical condition. Those situations deserve a veterinarian-led workup.

La Petite Labs is relevant here only as category context: its skin-focused systems are built for a different job than a plain fish oil, and La Petite Labs says when it does not have a finished-formula clinical trial. That does not make a skin system a substitute for EPA and DHA fish oil, and it does not make Triglyceride Omega a substitute for a broader skin plan. The useful distinction for buyers is role clarity, not brand swapping.

If the goal is omega-3 intake, an oil label should make EPA, DHA, serving size, storage, freshness, contaminant testing, and cost per day easy to evaluate. If the goal is skin barrier or multi-ingredient skin support, the buyer should read the full formula, ingredient roles, evidence status, safety cautions, and overlap with the pet's current diet or medications.

The First 90 Days With A Pump Fish Oil

The first 90 days should be treated as an observation period, not a promise period. Before starting, write down the pet's weight, current diet, other supplements, medications, skin and coat concerns, stool consistency, appetite, and any veterinarian instructions. Because the label says to mix Triglyceride Omega with the pet's meal once daily, consistency matters: the owner should give the measured amount with the same meal pattern and avoid double-dosing when multiple family members feed the pet.

During the first week, watch acceptance and tolerance. Does the dog or cat eat the full meal with the oil mixed in? Does the pump deliver the expected amount cleanly? Is there any sign of irritation or an adverse reaction? The label's instruction is clear that if irritation or an adverse reaction occurs, use should be discontinued and a veterinarian consulted immediately.

Over the following weeks, owners can track the reasons they bought the oil in the first place, such as coat quality or skin comfort, while staying careful with language. The public page describes support for skin, coat, joint, heart, kidney, immune, muscle, and bone health, but it does not establish a guaranteed timeline or disease outcome for an individual pet. If the pet's symptoms are worsening, spreading, painful, recurrent, or paired with appetite or behavior changes, that is not a supplement-monitoring problem; it is a veterinarian call.

By 90 days, the owner should know whether daily administration is practical, whether the pet tolerates the oil, whether the bottle economics make sense, and whether the veterinarian still wants it continued, adjusted, or stopped.

How To Read Any Fish-Oil Label After Reading This One

Start with the serving unit. Triglyceride Omega defines one pump as 1 mL, which is helpful because all of the active numbers are tied to that pump. Then look for total fish oil, EPA, and DHA. This label lists 1000 mg fish oil, 180 mg EPA, and 120 mg DHA per 1 mL pump. Total fish oil is not the same as EPA plus DHA, so products should not be compared only by oil volume or bottle size.

Next, check the dosing directions. Triglyceride Omega gives weight bands from 8-19 lbs through 80-100 lbs, with 1/2 pump to four pumps daily. That lets you calculate the pet's labeled daily EPA and DHA amount. If a pet falls outside the public bands, do not extrapolate automatically. Ask a veterinarian or the manufacturer for the appropriate instruction.

Then look beyond omega numbers. This label also includes vitamin A, vitamin D3, and vitamin E per pump. For many pets, that may be unremarkable, but overlap matters if the pet already receives fortified diets, other supplements, or veterinarian-directed products. A good fish-oil review should also ask whether inactive ingredients are disclosed; here, they were not easy to find publicly.

Finally, review quality and freshness signals. Useful items include public COAs, lot lookups, named labs, contaminant panels, freshness testing, storage instructions, and expiration or best-by clarity. Triglyceride Omega provides NASC Quality Seal language, NASC member language, contaminant absence claims for mercury, lead, and PCBs, and a cool-dry-away-from-sunlight storage instruction. It does not make public lot-level proof easy to review on the page checked.

What To Ask Your Vet Or Seller Before Checkout

Bring the label math, not just the product name. For Triglyceride Omega, tell your veterinarian that the reviewed liquid lists one pump as 1 mL and provides 1000 mg fish oil, 180 mg EPA, 120 mg DHA, 160 IU vitamin A, 40 IU vitamin D3, and 1.6 IU vitamin E per pump. Then give your pet's exact weight so the veterinarian can translate the public weight band into the pet's daily intake.

Ask whether the product fits the pet's medical context. The label itself highlights veterinarian consultation before use, especially for pregnant or nursing pets, pets with a medical condition, and pets taking other medications. Also mention any history of pancreatitis, fat restriction, allergies, sensitive stomach, weight-management plans, or current skin, coat, joint, heart, or kidney concerns. Those details change how an oil supplement should be evaluated.

Ask the seller or manufacturer for the missing public details if they matter to you. Reasonable questions include: What are the inactive ingredients? How many pumps or servings are in the 8 Ounce bottle? What is the current price? Is there a lot-specific COA? Are mercury, lead, and PCB results available for the lot being sold? Which lab performed the testing? Does the USP ingredient verification sentence on the page apply to this exact Triglyceride Omega SKU or to a different product reference?

Also ask practical use questions. How should the bottle be stored after opening? How long should one bottle be used after opening? What changes should prompt stopping the product? The public label gives basic storage and adverse-reaction instructions, but pet-specific answers are more useful.

Bottom Line On Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega

Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega is a fish-flavor liquid supplement for dogs and cats with a useful public active panel. The best thing about the label is that it gives one-pump math: 1 mL provides 1000 mg fish oil, 180 mg EPA, 120 mg DHA, 160 IU vitamin A, 40 IU vitamin D3, and 1.6 IU vitamin E. The weight-band directions are also clear for animals from 8 lbs through 100 lbs, using 1/2 pump to four pumps daily.

The product's public claims are broad but familiar for the category. The brand describes support for skin and coat, itchy skin support, immune response, muscle and bone health, heart and skin health, joint function, kidney health, mobility, flexibility, and general well-being. The page also says the oil is in triglyceride form and more bioavailable than ethyl ester or free fatty acid forms. These claims should be read with the legal disclaimer: the product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease, and the page checked does not provide a finished-product clinical trial for this exact SKU.

The main buyer cautions are transparency and fit. Price, subscription price, servings per container, inactive ingredients, life stage, public COA, lot lookup, named lab, and lot-specific contaminant panel results were not easy to find publicly. The label does include NASC Quality Seal language, NASC member language, contaminant absence claims, and storage and safety instructions. For an owner who wants a pump fish oil and is willing to verify the missing details, Triglyceride Omega is worth a careful look. For a sensitive pet, start with the veterinarian conversation before ordering.

“Because the reviewed page showed no featured offer price and no serving count, daily cost should be calculated only after the buyer verifies live purchase details.”

Educational content only. This material is not a substitute for veterinary advice. Always consult your veterinarian about your dog’s specific needs. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. Products mentioned are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Glossary

EPA

Eicosapentaenoic acid, one of the named omega-3 fatty acids disclosed on the label at 180 mg minimum per 1 mL pump.

DHA

Docosahexaenoic acid, another named omega-3 fatty acid disclosed on the label at 120 mg minimum per 1 mL pump.

Triglyceride form

The oil form the brand describes for this product; the page says it is more bioavailable than ethyl ester or free fatty acid forms, but does not provide a study citation on the page checked.

NASC Quality Seal

A National Animal Supplement Council quality signal referenced on the product page, alongside audit language; it is not the same as a public lot-specific COA.

COA

Certificate of analysis, a document buyers may request to review lot-specific testing; a public COA was not easy to find for this SKU on the pages checked.

Guaranteed analysis

The label panel that lists minimum or maximum nutrient values; this product lists Crude Fat at 99% minimum and Moisture at 0.10% maximum.

Pump

The product's dosing unit. For this liquid, one pump is defined as 1 mL and is the basis for the fish oil, EPA, DHA, and vitamin amounts.

Inactive ingredients

Non-active formula components such as carriers, flavors, or preservatives. They were not easy to find publicly for the reviewed liquid SKU.

Related Reading

References

References

Sources for the Vetoquinol Triglyceride Omega facts on this page

Competitor label, pricing, and claims facts on this page come from these public sources. Links are provided for verification.

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