How to help an old dog with dementia

He's also looking forward (if a dog could do such a thing) to going to the beach, lying on the sofa and sunbathing.

He's also looking forward (if a dog could do such a thing) to going to the beach, lying on the sofa and sunbathing.

Published Jan 28, 2015

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Washington – Zeigfield waddled, rather than walked, into my examination room.

I’d been seeing this obese dachshund at my veterinary hospital for most of his 17 years, treating back problems, mild skin disease and regular episodes of what veterinarians tactfully call “dietary indiscretion” (in Zeigfield’s case, from eating a batch of chocolate chip cookies, part of an old sock and a half-bottle of his owner’s Prozac).

But today’s visit was different.

“He just hasn’t been himself for the past several months,” his owner reported. “He seems restless at night, but mostly he just lays around. He doesn’t play his old games anymore. There isn’t any single issue, but he just isn’t right.”

She had brought Zeigfield in because he had been urinating and defecating indoors, despite being house-trained since puppyhood. After ruling out most possible physical causes, I told Carol that her dog was likely developing dementia.

Pets live very different lives than when I started my veterinary practice 40 years ago. Dogs no longer run freely outside to be hit by cars, fight with other animals or eat out of garbage cans. The quality of dog food is considerably better, and we’ve controlled most deadly infectious diseases.

In short, dogs’ lifestyles are safe but sedentary, leading to longer lives but also chronic conditions such as obesity, arthritis and cognitive dysfunction. I find myself diagnosing these almost daily at the Southern California veterinary hospitals where I practice.

People are often surprised that their pets can develop something like human Alzheimer’s. But really, our brains are not that different from dogs’. The cellular changes of canine cognitive dysfunction would be recognisable under the microscope to any human brain pathologist: Plaques of beta amyloid - protein fragments believed to be the result of “oxidative stress” - lead to distinctive “neurofibrillary tangles” within the damaged nerve cells, and shrinkage of the brain appears in areas where memories are made and behaviors are shaped.

Some things are different between our species, of course. Fido doesn’t forget where he put his car keys. But he may not remember which door he uses to go out to the yard. The same inability to evaluate behavioural appropriateness may prompt a person with dementia to disrobe in public, or a dog with dementia to eliminate in the house without hesitation.

Many dogs with cognitive dysfunction wander restlessly all evening in a manner reminiscent of the “sundown syndrome” of Alzheimer’s patients. And most significant, finding familiar surroundings strangely unfamiliar often triggers anxiety and agitation.

When I explain such anxiety to owners of senile dogs, I often refer to a scene in the movie “On Golden Pond” in which Henry Fonda’s character leaves the house to pick strawberries and returns a few minutes later, shaking and distraught. “Nothing was familiar, not one damn tree,” he says. “I was scared half to death.”

As with many of the dogs I treat, Sterling, a 14-year-old Labrador retriever, was dealing with dementia along with other health problems. He had recently lost most of his hearing, and arthritic hips made it difficult for him to rise from his favourite sleeping spot.

Sterling spent hours every night panting and whining. Once he got to his feet, he could move fairly well. But as soon as he left the house for a walk around the neighbourhood, he pulled nervously at the leash to get back into the house, where he would pant and tremble for the next hour. Sterling’s owners felt that he was suffering, and they had started to consider euthanasia.

Once a dog’s cognition deteriorates, it loses the ability to compensate for discomfort, and the dog’s suffering becomes compounded by anxiety. This is the point at which many owners I’ve dealt with have made the difficult decision to euthanise their longtime companion. Although dementia is almost never fatal on its own, cognitive dysfunction and physical health problems are a debilitating combination.

Treatments for canine dementia are most effective when they are started before the signs of cognitive dysfunction start to show. This is equally true in humans, which is why researchers are working on tests to predict Alzheimer’s long before symptoms appear.

Studies suggest that some nutritional supplements (such as DHA, one of the omega-3 fatty acids found in fish oil) and antioxidants may slow mental decline. S-Adenosyl methionine (SAMe) is an over-the-counter supplement that may provide mild help for old brains. There is even a medication approved by the FDA for canine cognitive dysfunction: Seleginine is a derivative of a drug used in human Parkinson’s disease. In my experience, I have not seen dramatic results with this medication, but it is usually prescribed in the later stages of dementia, when it may be too little, too late.

We can also borrow from the extensive research that has been done in humans and laboratory animals, which finds that eating a healthful diet (high in omega-3s), staying mentally active and getting lots of aerobic exercise may delay the onset of senile dementia.

The exact amount of exercise that is required to delay senility in dogs has yet to be studied, but when I see one of my canine patients who is still alert and happy at 15 years old, the dog’s owner invariably tells me, “He has always gotten out on his walks every day, no matter what.”

When we are in the middle of our busy lives, old age seems far away and taking steps to delay senile dementia (for our dogs or ourselves) isn’t a priority.

There is even a certain unspoken acknowledgment that old age and a weak mind are inexorably linked. It isn’t until your graying canine companion is anxiously pacing the house at midnight or your mother forgets your name that you think you’d do anything possible to bring back the memory and comprehension that has been lost.

Something to think about while you take a long walk with your dog.

Washington Post

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