Southern Ocean Animal Hospital

Balance & Movement Issues

If your pet is wobbling, falling, weak, circling, or acting uncoordinated, veterinarians use a step-by-step neurological exam to figure out where the problem is coming from....
Balance & Movement Issues
Balance & Movement Issues

How Veterinarians Evaluate Balance and Movement Problems in Dogs and Cats

TL;DR (Too Long; Didn’t Read)

If your pet is wobbling, falling, weak, circling, or acting uncoordinated, veterinarians use a step-by-step neurological exam to figure out where the problem is coming from. Most balance and movement issues can be diagnosed without CT or MRI, using history, observation, reflex testing, and basic diagnostics. Advanced imaging is recommended only when necessary—or if a client specifically requests it.


ELI5 (Explain Like I’m 5)

Balance and movement work like a team sport. The brain, inner ear, spinal cord, nerves, and muscles all have to talk to each other. If one part gets sick or injured, your pet might walk funny, fall over, or feel weak. Vets figure out which part isn’t talking properly by watching how your pet moves and testing reflexes—kind of like checking wires to see where the signal stops.


Introduction

Problems with balance and movement are some of the most alarming symptoms pet owners notice. A dog that suddenly can’t stand, a cat with a head tilt, or a pet that seems drunk when walking naturally causes worry.

The good news is that veterinarians have a highly structured, repeatable way to evaluate these signs. In many cases, the cause can be localized and treated without advanced imaging.

At Southern Ocean Animal Hospital, neurological evaluations focus on:

  • Careful observation
  • Hands-on testing
  • Logical localization
  • Stepwise diagnostics
  • Clear communication with pet families

This article explains how vets evaluate balance and movement issues, what signs mean, how dogs and cats differ, and when referral is recommended.


Key Ideas at a Glance

  • 🧠 Balance problems are neurological until proven otherwise
  • 👀 Observation is just as important as testing
  • 🐾 Gait tells a story
  • 🔍 Most cases can be localized without MRI or CT
  • 🧪 Bloodwork often rules out non-neurologic causes
  • ⏱️ Sudden vs. slow onset matters

What Do “Balance and Movement” Problems Look Like?

Pet owners often describe:

  • Wobbling or stumbling
  • Falling to one side
  • Head tilt
  • Weakness in one or more legs
  • Knuckling (dragging the tops of the paws)
  • Trouble standing up
  • Circling
  • Sudden inability to walk

These signs can come from different parts of the nervous system, which is why a structured exam is so important.


The Neurological Examination: Step by Step

Veterinarians use a consistent neurological exam, similar to the formal exam sheet used in practice (like the neurologic examination form you shared), to avoid guessing and to ensure nothing is missed.

1. History & Mentation

Before touching the pet, the vet gathers information:

  • When did symptoms start?
  • Sudden or gradual?
  • Getting worse, better, or unchanged?
  • Any trauma?
  • Any toxin exposure?
  • Seizures?
  • Pain?

Mentation (mental awareness) is observed:

  • Alert and interactive
  • Confused or disoriented
  • Lethargic
  • Stuporous or unresponsive

Changes here suggest brain involvement.


2. Gait and Posture Evaluation

The pet is watched walking, turning, standing, and sometimes trotting.

Common findings:

  • Ataxia – uncoordinated, drunken gait
  • Paresis – weakness
  • Plegia – paralysis
  • Circling – often brain-related
  • Head tilt – commonly vestibular (balance system)
  • Wide-based stance – balance compensation

Simply watching a pet walk can narrow the problem to the brain, spinal cord, or inner ear.


3. Postural Reactions (Coordination Tests)

These tests evaluate whether the brain knows where the body is in space.

Examples:

  • Paw placement (knuckling test)
  • Hopping
  • Wheelbarrow test
  • Extensor postural thrust

Delayed or absent responses suggest neurological dysfunction, not orthopedic pain.


4. Cranial Nerve Examination

Cranial nerves control:

  • Vision
  • Facial movement
  • Eye position
  • Balance
  • Swallowing
  • Hearing

Findings such as:

  • Abnormal eye movements (nystagmus)
  • Facial droop
  • Loss of blink reflex
  • Head tilt

…help localize disease to the brainstem or vestibular system.


5. Spinal Reflexes and Palpation

Reflexes help determine:

  • Upper vs lower motor neuron disease
  • Spinal cord involvement
  • Peripheral nerve disease

The spine is gently palpated for:

  • Pain
  • Muscle tension
  • Abnormal posture

6. Sensory Testing

This checks whether nerves can transmit sensation:

  • Superficial pain
  • Deep pain perception

Loss of deep pain is a serious prognostic indicator.


Putting It Together: Neuro-Localization

The goal is localization, not immediate diagnosis.

Region AffectedCommon Signs
ForebrainCircling, behavior changes, seizures
BrainstemBalance issues, cranial nerve deficits
CerebellumTremors, severe incoordination
Spinal cordWeakness, paralysis
Peripheral nervesMuscle weakness, reduced reflexes
Inner ear (vestibular)Head tilt, falling

Once localized, treatment can begin—even before advanced imaging.


Advanced Diagnostics (When Needed)

Bloodwork & Urinalysis

Used to rule out:

  • Liver disease
  • Kidney disease
  • Electrolyte imbalances
  • Infection
  • Endocrine disease

X-Rays

  • Evaluate spine and bones
  • Rule out fractures or severe disc disease

MRI / CT (Referral)

Recommended when:

  • Structural brain disease suspected
  • Surgery is an option
  • Signs are worsening
  • Client requests definitive imaging

Spinal Tap (CSF Analysis)

  • Detects inflammation or infection
  • Used for meningitis or encephalitis cases

Dogs vs. Cats: Key Differences

FeatureDogsCats
Vestibular diseaseVery commonCommon
IVDD-related ataxiaCommonRare
Inner ear diseaseModerateCommon
Trauma-related issuesCommonVery common
Subtle signsObviousOften hidden

Cats are masters at masking neurological disease, so subtle changes matter.


Breeds More Commonly Affected

Dogs

  • Large breeds (vestibular, spinal disease): Labradors, Shepherds
  • Chondrodystrophic breeds (IVDD): Dachshunds, French Bulldogs
  • Toy breeds: Atlantoaxial instability
  • Senior dogs: Cognitive dysfunction, vestibular disease

Cats

  • No strong breed predispositions
  • Older cats: vestibular disease, tumors
  • Outdoor cats: trauma-related issues

Symptom Timelines

Sudden Onset (Hours–Days)

  • Vestibular disease
  • Stroke
  • Trauma
  • FCE

Gradual Onset (Weeks–Months)

  • Tumors
  • Degenerative disease
  • Chronic ear disease

Timeline helps determine urgency and prognosis.


Treatment Approaches (Without Immediate MRI/CT)

Medications

  • Anti-inflammatories
  • Steroids (select cases)
  • Antibiotics (ear or infection)
  • Anti-nausea meds
  • Pain management

Supportive Care

  • Assisted walking
  • Non-slip surfaces
  • Confinement
  • Hydration and nutrition support

Physical Rehabilitation

  • Balance exercises
  • Strength training
  • Laser therapy
  • Hydrotherapy (when appropriate)

Dr. Dan’s Diagnostic & Treatment Philosophy

Dr. Dan emphasizes:

  • Clinical examination first
  • Logical localization before testing
  • Conservative treatment when appropriate
  • Clear discussion of referral options

Most balance and movement issues can be:

  • Localized clinically
  • Stabilized medically
  • Managed successfully without advanced imaging

MRI or CT referral is always available when:

  • Surgery is being considered
  • Signs worsen or don’t improve
  • Owners want definitive answers

Real-World Example

A senior dog presents with:

  • Sudden head tilt
  • Falling to one side
  • Normal appetite

Neurological exam localizes the issue to the vestibular system. Bloodwork is normal. Supportive care is started without MRI. The dog improves dramatically within days—classic idiopathic vestibular disease.


Summary

Balance and movement problems look scary, but they are often diagnosable and treatable with careful examination and logical thinking. The neurological exam remains the most powerful tool in veterinary medicine—often more informative than expensive imaging.


Gives a Call & Schedule

If your dog or cat is:

  • Wobbling
  • Weak
  • Falling
  • Acting uncoordinated

📞 Contact Southern Ocean Animal Hospital for a neurological evaluation. Early assessment leads to clearer answers, better outcomes, and peace of mind.


Glossary

  • Ataxia – Uncoordinated movement
  • Paresis – Weakness
  • Plegia – Paralysis
  • Vestibular system – Balance system (inner ear + brain)
  • Neuro-localization – Determining where a problem originates
  • Mentation – Mental awareness