Some dogs come apart at the first roll of thunder. Others handle storms fine but cannot stand being left alone, and go to the door the moment the car backs out of the drive. Stress is common in dogs, and it rarely looks dignified. Paws and Whiskers, a dog supplement brand developed with veterinarian Dr. Petar Petrov, makes a calming chew aimed at those moments. It is worth being plain up front about what a chew like this is for, and what it is not, because the space between the two is where a lot of owners end up let down.
How Stress Shows Up in Dogs
The triggers are usually predictable. Thunderstorms, fireworks, a suitcase appearing in the hallway, and an owner reaching for the keys. The reactions are messier. A dog might pace, pant, whine, wedge itself into the bathroom, drool on the floor, or chew something it would normally leave alone. None of that is the dog being difficult. It is a stress response, and the better an owner reads the pattern, the more they can plan around it. A chew is one possible piece of that plan, not the entirety of it.
What Is in a Calming Chew?
Calming chews tend to pull from the same short list of ingredients. Chamomile, melatonin, and L-theanine are common picks, chosen for their associations with relaxation rather than for knocking a dog out. The calming soft chew from Paws and Whiskers uses those three, in amounts set for dogs instead of scaled down from a human product. As always, the dose is the part that takes care, since the same ingredient behaves one way in a 10-pound dog and another in a 70-pound one.
What the Paws and Whiskers Chew Is, and What It Is Not
This is the honest part. A calming chew is not a sedative, not a guarantee, and not a cure for an anxious dog. Some dogs respond to this kind of support, and some do not, and even when it seems to help, it tends to take the edge off a moment rather than erase it. The Paws and Whiskers chew is built to be given ahead of a known trigger, like a storm in the forecast or an evening out, as one small tool among several. An owner expecting a switch that flips a frantic dog calm will be disappointed by this product or any other.

When Anxiety Needs a Professional
Real anxiety is a behavioral and medical issue, not a shelf problem. A dog that panics whenever it is alone, hurts itself trying to break out of a crate, or lives in a near-constant state of stress needs a vet or a qualified trainer, not a stronger chew. Behavior work, and in some cases medication, are what actually move things there, and a supplement is a minor support alongside them at best. Dr. Petar Petrov’s role in the Paws and Whiskers formulas does not change that order. Serious anxiety starts with a professional, and a chew is a footnote to that, if it has any place at all.
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and is not veterinary, medical, or professional advice. Pet owners should consult a licensed veterinarian before giving any supplement to their dog, especially if the dog has an existing health condition, takes medication, is pregnant or nursing, or has known allergies. Review product information, ingredients, and claims carefully before use.












