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Canine Vestibular Disease (CVD)

My 10 and 1/2 year old male Lab was diagnosed with CVD on 2/18. I am giving him 25 mg. of Meclizine per day. He has improved greatly in the past five days: eating, drinking and eliminating on his own and walking steadily on carpeted floors.

He can also walk steadily on linoleum and tile if he goes slowly, but falls if he moves too quickly. He sometimes stumbles (even on carpeting) when he scratches, due to having to balance on three legs. His head tilt persists and he refuses to roll on either side. The specialist indicated that rolling seems to bring on the vertigo.

In your experience, how long can I expect or hope for further recovery? Are there any supplements or treatments that may be helpful?

Thank you.

Re: Canine Vestibular Disease (CVD)

I had an old girl who developed CVD at about that same age. It took her some weeks to be less prone to fall towards her bad side - I had to make sure the stairs to the basement were closed securely as she wouldn't be able to go down stairs by herself for awhile. I would say she recovered 95% - she always had a tendency to turn towards the bad side till the day she died. But it didn't really bother her after the first few weeks.

Good luck with your boy - I'm sure he'll be feeling better soon!

Re: Canine Vestibular Disease (CVD)

Solo came down with it about 4 months ago and is still walking with her head to one side but can handle tile floors, carpeted stairs, and jumping onto the bed fine. Our recently acquired sheet of ice in the dog yard is giving her trouble, but at almost 14 her hind legs aren't what they used to be,either. I would say she continued to improve for several weeks after it struck.

Re: Canine Vestibular Disease (CVD)

Peggy Stevens
Solo came down with it about 4 months ago and is still walking with her head to one side but can handle tile floors, carpeted stairs, and jumping onto the bed fine. Our recently acquired sheet of ice in the dog yard is giving her trouble, but at almost 14 her hind legs aren't what they used to be,either. I would say she continued to improve for several weeks after it struck.


Thank you, Breeder and Peggy, for your insights. I appreciate the collective wisdom of this forum so much!

Re: Canine Vestibular Disease (CVD)

My first dog got it when he was older,at 13 years, his first episode we rushed him to the ER vet, not knowing if the cause was something life threatening like a tumor or a stroke of some sort, when they said it was Vestibular syndrome they gave us nothing but Benadryl, but wanted to keep him overnight and charge us $1300, I asked about giving him Antivert, the ER vet didn't know if it could be given to dogs, I knew it could so we took him home and gave him some of mine. the Meclizine was a life saver,if he got it at the start of an attack within about an hour he could walk. He had them several times, they were not severe episodes.
I have another dog that is 13, his one attack was pretty severe, even with the Antivert twice a day he still had trouble maintaining his balance without falling over, it took him several weeks before his balance returned to baseline and the head tilt took longer to go away. There's still a slight tilt, but unless you knew it was there you wouldn't notice. The only thing now is while he can go downstairs with no trouble he wants us to stand behind him to go up.
I would make sure your boy doesn't have a deep seated ear infection too, that can be a cause.

Re: Canine Vestibular Disease (CVD)

A girl of mine lived with Geriatric Canine Vestibular Disease for more than 3 years after diagnosis until over age 15 when we helped her cross to the Rainbow Bridge. She also had LP without surgery, diagnosis was around 13. There was no way I could put her through the surgery at that age. She lived well over 2 years post 1st symptoms of LP.

Each dog with a senior disease does differently. It also depends how much else is wrong. My girl was losing especially her rear muscle rapidly in the end to the point she was quite far down in her hocks. A relative carried her out to potty 5 times daily. She never had an accident in the home. I probably should have let her go then but her tail wagged, she ate fine, she had a sparkle in her eyes and she maneuvered around the home ok most of the time.

With those 3 health problems, she shocked me living so long and wagging her tail the minute someone came near her or into the TV room. We bought her a big, thick, orthopedic bed and kept her stress level at a minimum. Even pizza delivery got her LP and Vestibular Disease going, so we stopped ordering pizza. She loved the crust and smell of it as it entered the home to the point she stressed herself out when the doorbell rang and she got a whiff of pizza.

All you can do is make him as comfortable as possible, keep his stress level down, keep him on a healthy diet and if the medication is helping he has a chance of a longer life. As long as his time here is quality you have it beat. I wouldn't expect a huge improvement from where you are at now. Vitamin C is always good or use an all around Multi Vitamin and add some extra C. You can wrap it in cream cheese,

I hope you have more quality years together. You will know when it's too much for him, our Labs always tell us. Don't allow an ER vet to tell you he had a stroke as GVD can present as a stroke to some unknowing vets.

I wish you 2 all of the best. Good luck and enjoy him!

Re: Canine Vestibular Disease (CVD)

Update: On 3/11, three weeks after his diagnosis of CVD, my dog was pronounced "completely recovered." He has no residual deficits of any kind, and I'm very happy! The specialist couldn't predict if it would recur, so I'll have to hope for the best.

Thank you for your input; it was helpful, especially learning about about a possible connection between CVD and stress. Until research points to a definitive cause, it's something I'll keep in mind.