Dog Longevity Field Note · Evidence grade: moderate/high for observation and vet discussion
Senior Dog Cognitive Changes: What to Track Before Assuming Dementia
“Is this dementia, or is my dog just getting old?” is a scary question because the answer is rarely obvious from one behavior.
A senior dog who paces at night, stares at a wall, has accidents, seems clingier, or gets stuck behind furniture may be showing cognitive changes. That same dog could also be reacting to pain, arthritis, vision or hearing loss, anxiety, urinary disease, medication effects, or another medical problem.
The safe owner job is not to diagnose canine cognitive dysfunction at home. It is to notice patterns early, write down concrete examples, and bring your veterinarian better information before the changes get dismissed as “just aging.”
Educational only. Not veterinary advice. Dog Longevity Lab does not diagnose, treat, prescribe, or recommend medical plans. Talk with your veterinarian before changing diet, supplements, medication, exercise, dental care, or treatment plans.
Why behavior changes get missed in older dogs
Behavior changes often arrive gradually. A little more daytime sleep. One strange night. A dog who pauses in a hallway. A new accident in the house. Because the changes are small, owners may normalize them until the pattern is hard to describe.
Veterinary sources make two points worth holding together: cognitive dysfunction is a real age-related condition in dogs, and similar-looking signs can come from other health problems. That is why tracking matters. A written pattern helps your veterinarian decide what to examine, test, rule out, or monitor.
Evidence grade
Evidence grade: Moderate/high for owner observation, screening questions, and vet-led evaluation; not a home diagnosis.
What the evidence supports: AAHA describes canine cognitive dysfunction as an age-related neurodegenerative condition and uses DISHAA categories — disorientation, social interaction changes, sleep-wake changes, house-training or learned-behavior changes, activity changes, and anxiety — to organize signs. A Dog Aging Project study of 15,019 dogs found the odds of canine cognitive dysfunction increased with age and were higher in dogs reported as not active compared with very active dogs after controls.
What it does not prove: That any single behavior means dementia, that activity alone prevents cognitive dysfunction, that owners can diagnose the cause from a checklist, or that every dog should receive the same treatment, diet, supplement, medication, or test.
Safe owner action: Track the specific behavior, timing, frequency, context, videos if safe, and related changes in vision, hearing, pain, mobility, appetite, thirst, urination, sleep, and anxiety. Bring those notes to your veterinarian.
Unsafe owner action: Starting medication, supplements, special diets, or behavior plans without veterinary guidance; assuming all changes are dementia; or ignoring sudden, severe, painful, or worsening signs.
The tracking frame: DISHAA without self-diagnosis
DISHAA is useful because it gives owners plain categories for notes. It is not useful if it becomes a home diagnosis label.
- Disorientation. Getting stuck, staring, seeming lost in familiar places, trouble finding a door, or confusion in normal routines.
- Interactions. More clingy, more withdrawn, less responsive to familiar people, irritability, or changes with other pets.
- Sleep-wake cycle. Night waking, pacing, vocalizing, restlessness, or sleeping much more during the day.
- House training and learned behaviors. New accidents, missed cues, forgotten commands, or confusion around previously learned routines.
- Activity level. Less interest in play, aimless wandering, repetitive pacing, or restlessness that does not fit the old pattern.
- Anxiety. New fear, separation distress, noise sensitivity, agitation, or unsettled behavior at predictable times.
What to write down before the vet visit
A vague worry becomes more useful when it has dates and examples. Start with a one-page note:
- When did the change start, and is it stable, improving, or getting worse?
- How often does it happen: once, weekly, daily, nightly?
- What time of day does it happen?
- What was happening before it started: move, medication change, injury, dental pain, diet change, illness, houseguest, travel, or routine disruption?
- Does your dog also show changes in mobility, vision, hearing, appetite, thirst, urination, stool, weight, breathing, pain, or dental comfort?
- Can you safely capture a short video of pacing, getting stuck, confusion, or nighttime restlessness?
If a change is sudden, severe, painful, involves collapse or seizure-like activity, or your dog seems acutely unwell, contact your veterinarian promptly instead of waiting to build a tracking history.
What to ask your veterinarian
- “Could pain, arthritis, vision or hearing loss, urinary disease, medication effects, or another medical issue explain this behavior?”
- “Would a physical exam, neurologic exam, bloodwork, urinalysis, or other testing help rule out look-alike causes?”
- “Should we use a cognitive questionnaire such as DISHAA or another tool to monitor this over time?”
- “What changes would make this urgent rather than something to monitor?”
- “If this is cognitive dysfunction, what options fit my dog’s health history, and what are the tradeoffs?”
- “What environmental changes are safe while we are figuring this out?”
What not to overbelieve
- “Old dogs just do that.” Age changes risk. It should not automatically explain away new behavior.
- One scary internet checklist. Checklists can organize observations, but they cannot rule out pain, sensory loss, urinary disease, seizures, or other causes.
- Activity as a guarantee. The Dog Aging Project activity association is important, but it does not prove that more exercise prevents cognitive dysfunction in an individual dog.
- Supplement certainty. AAHA notes limited quality and rigor for many supplement, nutraceutical, acupuncture, and diet claims. Treat these as vet discussions, not shopping-list instructions.
- Medication names as owner action. Medications and diet changes belong in a veterinary plan, especially when other conditions or drug interactions may matter.
The practical takeaway
Cognitive health is part of dog longevity because it affects comfort, sleep, safety, routine, and the human-animal bond.
Do not wait until “dementia” feels like the only explanation. Start tracking the boring details now: sleep, confusion, interaction, house-training, activity, anxiety, pain, senses, and timing. Then bring your veterinarian a pattern instead of a panic.
Source notes
- AAHA Senior Care Guidelines: Managing Cognitive Dysfunction and Behavioral Anxiety: DISHAA categories, diagnosis-of-exclusion framing, underrecognition, and cautious treatment discussion.
- Dog Aging Project cognitive function study: 15,019-dog cohort; age and activity associations with canine cognitive dysfunction odds.
- AVMA senior pets guidance: senior behavior changes can reflect discomfort, sensory changes, disease, aging, or cognitive dysfunction; contact a veterinarian with behavior changes.
- Cornell Riney Canine Health Center: Cognitive dysfunction syndrome: clinical signs, underdiagnosis risk, and the need to rule out similar conditions with veterinary evaluation.