Volume 4, Issue 1 , Pages 25-30, January 2009
Association between neurologic and cognitive dysfunction signs in a sample of aging dogs
Abstract
In human neurology, patients with Alzheimer's disease show seizures and signs of motor deficits, such as movement disorders (i.e., restlessness, slowness, impaired gait, and, rarely, resting tremors). Because canine Cognitive Dysfunction Syndrome (CDS) is considered an Alzheimer-like disease in dogs, it might be possible to document concurrent behavioral and neurologic signs in aging canine patients as well. Twenty-one dogs (14 dogs with CDS-related signs, 7 normal dogs) greater than 7 years of age were studied. Owners completed a behavioral questionnaire and the dogs underwent a neurologic evaluation. Dogs with CDS were twice as likely to show neurologic deficits as dogs without CDS. However, based on this pilot study, a sample of 187 dogs affected with CDS are required to show statistically significant differences between the proportions of dogs with CDS and with neurologic signs and the proportions of control dogs without any of these disorders.
Keywords: Alzheimer-like disease, Cognitive Dysfunction Syndrome, behavioral medicine, neurology, dog
To access this article, please choose from the options below
Presented in part at the poster session of the 20th Annual Conference of the European Society of Veterinary Neurology, Berne, Switzerland, September 27–29, 2007
PII: S1558-7878(08)00177-9
doi:10.1016/j.jveb.2008.09.033
© 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 4, Issue 1 , Pages 25-30, January 2009
