Is your dog whining all the time? One reader wrote in about this particular problem and Dr. Barchas offered up a few answers.
Dear Dr. Barchas,
My older dog (aged 10) has started whining a lot. She has weak back legs, but I can’t tell if she’s in pain or being a pain. She has become very attached to me since I retired last year. When the vet checked her back legs she poked, prodded and rotated them, then said she had weakening and arthritis — and put her on tramadol — but said it was not painful for her. She’s whining as I write this!
Ellen
What causes dog whining in the first place?
Excessive vocalization (which is a fancy way of saying barking or whining — vets are taught from the start that a normal word should never be used when a fancier word is available) can be a sign of many things. Pain is certainly among them, but it is not the only possible cause of whining.
Dog whining might be a response to pain
Let’s start by talking a bit more about pain and its symptoms in dogs. Acute (or sudden) pain, such as that suffered after surgery, when a limb is broken or when a dog is in the throes of an ordeal such as bloat, usually causes whining. Chronic pain, such as that experienced with arthritis, often does not cause dogs to vocalize.
Therefore, although hip arthritis is very common in older dogs (and may be playing a role in your dog’s hind limb weakness, and may indeed be causing pain), it probably is not contributing to the whining.
Unless you are seeing other symptoms of pain — such as poor appetite, limping, guarding a painful body part, hiding or panting — then it’s unlikely that pain is contributing to the whining. The fact that your dog’s whining has not responded to tramadol, which is a pretty good painkiller, points to the same conclusion.
Fear and anxiety might cause dog whining
Other possible causes of dog whining include fear or anxiety, excitement (my pal Buster whines whenever he thinks we’re near a fetch field), certain metabolic or glandular disruptions, exposure to toxic substances, neurological problems and cognitive changes.
A dog whining from excitement, exposure to toxins, and fear or anxiety is usually transient, and stops when the stimulus that causes it is removed. Ellen, since your dog is whining continuously, it is unlikely that the problem is due to one of these causes.
Dog whining might signal mental issues
That leaves metabolic or glandular irregularities, neurological problems and cognitive change. Unfortunately, I am most suspicious of cognitive change in your dog’s case. Cognitive change is a fancy way of saying deteriorating mental function, also known as dementia (remember what I said a few paragraphs ago about vets and fancy words).
Some of the more consistent symptoms include whining or barking, loss of interest in favored activities, failure to greet or recognize the owner and loss of spatial recognition abilities, manifested by getting lost in formerly familiar environments.
Cognitive change in dogs is similar to dementia in humans in a couple of ways. First, it is very difficult to diagnose. Humans can take cognitive function tests, yet cognitive decline is still hard to pinpoint. Dogs can’t take tests, so a diagnosis by necessity involves some guesswork.
Second, it is hard to treat. A while ago, a medication called deprenyl was much ballyhooed, but ultimately led to generally disappointing results. Hill’s developed a diet, b/d Canine Aging & Alertness, designed to improve cognitive function, but it hasn’t really caught on. (For a while Hill’s marketed the diet ferociously, but now the company seems to be focusing all of its attention on y/d Feline, marketed for cats with thyroid disease.)
There is, however, one key difference between cognitive decline in dogs and in humans. A person with severe cognitive decline may have trouble truly functioning as a person. A dog with cognitive decline can usually still get along. Dogs can enjoy life without being able to drive, read, play chess or engage in other mentally demanding activities.
How to diagnose the issue and stop dog whining
I’d recommend that you investigate your dog’s problems a little deeper. Have your vet run blood and urine tests to rule out metabolic and endocrine problems. Get a full neurological evaluation to assess for other possible causes of whining. If, in the end, your dog is diagnosed with cognitive dysfunction, talk to your vet about the options. Although b/d and deprenyl aren’t always effective, sometimes lifestyle changes or intermittent use of sedatives can make a difference.
Thumbnail: Photography by Irina Kozorog/Shutterstock.
Read more about dog health issues on Dogster.com:
- Is Your Dog Snoring? Do All Dogs Snore?
- Dog Eye Discharge — What’s Normal and What’s Not
- How to Keep Your Dog From Getting Leptospirosis
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