Southern Ocean Animal Hospital

Neurology

A pet’s nervous system is like a big communication network. The brain sends messages through nerves to help a pet walk, blink, eat, see, feel, and stay balanced....
Neurology
Neurology

TLDR

Neurology in veterinary medicine focuses on diagnosing and treating disorders of the brain, spinal cord, nerves, and muscles in dogs, cats, and other pets. Common neurological issues include seizures, intervertebral disc disease (IVDD), vestibular disease, meningitis, neuropathies, and mobility disorders. Southern Ocean Animal Hospital uses advanced diagnostic tools—including neurological exams, laboratory tests, digital radiography, ultrasound, in-house blood analyzers, and referral-access MRI/CT—to identify conditions early and create effective treatment plans. Daniel N. Pascetta, DVM, evaluates each patient with a thorough, systematic neurological approach to ensure accuracy, safety, and compassionate care.


ELI5 (Explain Like I’m Five)

A pet’s nervous system is like a big communication network. The brain sends messages through nerves to help a pet walk, blink, eat, see, feel, and stay balanced.
When something goes wrong in that network—like a bad wire (nerve), a swollen switch (spinal cord), or a glitch in the computer (brain)—a pet might stumble, have a seizure, tilt their head, or act confused.

Neurology helps veterinarians figure out where the problem is and how to fix it.


Summary of Key Points

  • Neurology focuses on the brain, spinal cord, nerves, and muscles.
  • Common conditions include seizures, IVDD, vestibular disease, meningitis, neuropathies, and central nervous system disorders.
  • Dr. Dan conducts a full neurological exam, evaluates gait, reflexes, cranial nerves, posture, and responses to stimuli.
  • Diagnostic tools include bloodwork, urinalysis, digital X-rays, ultrasound, CSF analysis, and advanced imaging (MRI/CT through referral centers).
  • Treatment ranges from medication, anti-seizure therapy, steroids, pain management, physical therapy, to surgical referral if required.
  • Early diagnosis leads to better outcomes and improved quality of life.

Understanding Veterinary Neurology

Veterinary neurology is the branch of internal medicine focused on diseases affecting the nervous system of dogs, cats, and other pets. The nervous system is divided into two major parts:

  • Central nervous system (CNS):
    Brain and spinal cord
  • Peripheral nervous system (PNS):
    Nerves outside the brain and spinal cord, neuromuscular junctions, and muscles

These structures work together to control:

  • Balance
  • Coordination
  • Vision and hearing
  • Limb movement
  • Reflexes
  • Consciousness
  • Behavior
  • Pain response

When one part malfunctions, the entire system can be affected. A pet may show subtle or dramatic symptoms, and determining exactly where the problem originates is the foundation of neurological diagnosis.

Southern Ocean Animal Hospital uses a structured, step-by-step neurological evaluation guided by Daniel N. Pascetta, DVM, whose medical training at one of the nation’s top veterinary schools provides a highly advanced approach to neurological problem-solving.


Why Neurological Evaluations Are Important

Neurological disorders are often complex. Two pets with similar symptoms may have entirely different causes. For example:

  • A dog that cannot walk could have IVDD, spinal trauma, a brain tumor, or metabolic disease.
  • A cat with head tilt could have ear disease, vestibular syndrome, or a toxin exposure.
  • A pet with seizures might have epilepsy, infection, brain tumor, or liver disease.

A neurological exam allows Dr. Dan to:

  • Localize the lesion (brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves).
  • Identify severity.
  • Prioritize urgent findings.
  • Select appropriate diagnostics.
  • Initiate treatment quickly when needed.

Common Neurological Conditions in Dogs, Cats, and Other Pets

Seizures (Epilepsy and Non-Epileptic Causes)

Seizures are one of the most common neurological emergencies. Causes include:

  • Idiopathic epilepsy (often hereditary)
  • Brain tumors
  • Toxins
  • Metabolic disorders (liver disease, kidney disease)
  • Trauma
  • Infections such as meningitis or encephalitis
  • Immune-mediated disease

Intervertebral Disc Disease (IVDD)

More common in dogs—particularly Dachshunds, Beagles, Chihuahuas, Corgis, Shih Tzus.

Symptoms include:

  • Back pain
  • Hind-limb weakness
  • Trouble standing
  • Dragging limbs
  • Loss of bladder/bowel control

Immediate evaluation is crucial.

Vestibular Disease

Often described as “old dog vestibular disease,” but can occur at any age.

Signs:

  • Head tilt
  • Rapid eye movements (nystagmus)
  • Falling to one side
  • Inability to walk normally

Causes include inner ear infections, idiopathic vestibular disease, toxins, inflammation, or tumors.

Meningitis and Encephalitis

Inflammation of the brain or spinal cord membranes. Causes include:

  • Immune-mediated disease
  • Viral infection
  • Bacterial infection
  • Fungal infection
  • Tick-borne disease

Symptoms may include fever, pain, neck stiffness, or behavioral changes.

Neuropathies

These affect the peripheral nerves.

Examples:

  • Facial nerve paralysis
  • Laryngeal paralysis
  • Diabetic neuropathy
  • Tick paralysis
  • Trauma-related nerve injury

Brain Tumors

More common in older pets. Symptoms vary depending on tumor location.

Congenital Neurological Disorders

Examples:

  • Hydrocephalus
  • Cerebellar hypoplasia
  • Spinal malformations

How Daniel N. Pascetta, DVM, Performs a Comprehensive Neurological Exam

A structured neurological exam forms the foundation for all advanced diagnostics.

Step 1: Mental Status & Behavior

Checks alertness, response to voice, response to touch, and environmental awareness.

Step 2: Gait & Movement

Pets are observed walking to assess:

  • Coordination
  • Weakness
  • Stumbling
  • Ataxia
  • Head bobbing

Step 3: Postural Reactions

Tests ability to reposition paws and maintain balance.

Step 4: Cranial Nerve Assessment

This includes:

  • Vision tests
  • Pupil light reflex
  • Facial movement
  • Palpebral reflex
  • Gag reflex

Step 5: Spinal Reflexes

Reflex testing helps identify spinal cord lesions.

Step 6: Pain Perception and Spinal Palpation

Checks for spinal pain, muscle tension, and nerve sensitivity.

Dr. Dan’s methodical training ensures neurological localization is precise before ordering tests.


Diagnostic Tools Used at Southern Ocean Animal Hospital

In-House Laboratory

  • CBC
  • Chemistry panel
  • Electrolytes
  • Thyroid testing
  • Tick-borne disease panels

Diagnostic Imaging

  • Digital radiography
  • Ultrasound
  • Referral MRI and CT imaging when indicated

Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF) Analysis

Performed at specialist labs.

Infectious Disease Testing

  • Tick-borne panels
  • Fungal testing
  • Viral testing

Blood Pressure Monitoring

Important for brain-related disorders.

Advanced Neurological Referral When Needed

Southern Ocean Animal Hospital collaborates with regional specialty centers when neurosurgical intervention is indicated.


Treatment Options for Neurological Disorders

Seizure Management

  • Anti-seizure medication (levetiracetam, phenobarbital, zonisamide)
  • Emergency seizure control drugs
  • Long-term monitoring
  • Identifying underlying causes

Pain and Inflammation Control

  • Steroids
  • NSAIDs
  • Gabapentin
  • Muscle relaxants

Antibiotics and Antifungals

For infectious conditions.

Surgery

For conditions such as IVDD, tumors, or trauma, performed at referral neurosurgical centers.

Physical Rehabilitation

  • Strength training
  • Mobility exercises
  • Balance improvement

Lifestyle and Environmental Adjustments

  • Flooring changes
  • Ramps
  • Harnesses
  • Controlled activity plans

Example Scenario (Realistic, Pet Owner–Friendly)

A middle-aged Beagle arrives unable to walk on his hind legs. Dr. Dan performs:

  1. Neurological exam: Suggests thoracolumbar spinal cord lesion.
  2. X-rays: Rule out fractures.
  3. Pain response testing: Indicates severe nerve compression.
  4. Referral MRI: Confirms IVDD.
  5. Treatment plan: Emergency pain control, neurologist referral for surgery.

The owner receives clear explanations and a step-by-step plan. The dog walks again after recovery.


Timeline Example for Neurological Diagnosis and Care

Day 1

  • Comprehensive neurological exam
  • Bloodwork and X-rays
  • Initial treatment (pain control, anti-seizure, or antibiotics)

Days 2–4

  • Additional diagnostics (MRI/CT referral, CSF analysis if needed)

Weeks 1–6

  • Medication adjustment
  • Physical therapy
  • Re-evaluation of neurological status

Long-Term

  • Monitoring
  • Medication checks
  • Lifestyle management
  • Ongoing neurological support

What-If Situations Pet Owners Commonly Worry About

“What if my pet suddenly collapses?”

Immediate evaluation is essential. Many causes are treatable if addressed early.

“What if my dog has a seizure but then seems normal?”

Still requires a neurological workup; many underlying conditions repeat or worsen.

“What if my cat tilts its head overnight?”

Likely vestibular disease or ear infection; requires examination to avoid falls or self-injury.

“What if my pet becomes paralyzed?”

Some pets recover with urgent treatment; others require surgical referral. Time is critical.


When to Call a Veterinarian Immediately

  • Seizures lasting more than 3 minutes
  • Multiple seizures in 24 hours
  • Sudden paralysis
  • Inability to walk
  • Severe head tilt
  • Uncontrolled tremors
  • Sudden blindness
  • Extreme pain when touched
  • Collapse or disorientation

Southern Ocean Animal Hospital Service Area

Southern Ocean Animal Hospital is located at:

319 E Main St, Tuckerton, NJ 08087

Pet owners travel from throughout the Jersey Shore region and beyond because of the hospital’s trusted reputation for neurological diagnostics.

Service area includes communities within ~35 miles, such as:

  • Tuckerton
  • Little Egg Harbor
  • Manahawkin
  • Stafford Township
  • Barnegat
  • Waretown
  • Lacey Township
  • Bayville
  • Forked River
  • Long Beach Island (Barnegat Light, Surf City, Ship Bottom, Beach Haven, Holgate)
  • New Gretna
  • Egg Harbor City
  • Galloway
  • Absecon
  • Brigantine
  • Atlantic City

Clients routinely travel 45–60+ minutes for advanced diagnostics, continuity of care, and the expertise provided by Dr. Dan.


Glossary

Ataxia: Lack of coordination.
Cranial nerves: Nerves controlling the face, eyes, and head.
CSF analysis: Testing of spinal fluid for infection or inflammation.
Idiopathic epilepsy: Seizures without a known cause.
IVDD: Spinal disc disease causing pain or paralysis.
Meningitis: Inflammation of the brain/spinal cord membranes.
Nystagmus: Rapid, involuntary eye movements.
Proprioception: The body’s ability to sense movement and position.


Schedule an Appointment

Neurological symptoms can be frightening for any pet owner, but early diagnosis and proper care dramatically improve outcomes. Southern Ocean Animal Hospital provides comprehensive neurological evaluations, advanced diagnostics, and compassionate guidance every step of the way. If your pet shows any signs of neurological distress—no matter how subtle—contact the hospital promptly for an examination by Daniel N. Pascetta, DVM, whose extensive training and methodical approach ensure your pet receives the highest standard of care.