Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Why Border Collies Collapse During Exercise and What Owners See
By Taylor, Susan et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2016·From the Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Border Collie Collapse: Owner Survey Results and Veterinary Description of Videotaped Episodes.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 165 Border Collies experienced repeated episodes of abnormal walking or collapsing during intense exercise, often while retrieving or herding. Most of these dogs were young adults, around 2 years old, and had anywhere from 2 to over 100 episodes. Owners noticed that high temperatures and excitement seemed to trigger these episodes. After reviewing videos of the collapses, veterinarians found that the dogs showed signs like unsteady movements and falling over, suggesting a possible central nervous system issue. While the exact cause remains unclear, the dogs did not show any signs of worsening health over time.
People also search for: Border Collie collapse symptoms · dog exercise intolerance · Border Collie abnormal gait · dog collapsing during exercise · Border Collie neurological issues
Abstract
Completed surveys were obtained from owners of 165 border collies experiencing repeated episodes of abnormal gait or collapse during strenuous exercise. Unremarkable veterinary evaluation and lack of disease progression over time made common systemic, cardiac, and neurologic causes of exercise intolerance unlikely. Survey questions addressed signalment, age of onset, description of episodes, and owner perception of factors associated with collapse. Most dogs were young adults (median 2 yr) when episodes began, and they had experienced from 2 to more than 100 episodes (median 6) prior to their owners completing the survey. Retrieving was the activity most commonly associated with episodes (112/165 dogs, 68%), followed by herding stock (39/165 dogs, 24%). Owners reported that high environmental temperatures (111/165 dogs, 67%) and excitement (67/165 dogs, 41%) increased the likelihood of their dog having an episode during strenuous activity. Veterinary evaluation of videotapes of presumed border collie collapse (BCC) episodes (40 dogs) were used to provide a description of the typical features of BCC episodes. Altered mentation, symmetrical ataxia affecting all four limbs, increased pelvic limb extensor tone and toe scuffing or knuckling, truncal swaying, and falling to the side were common features, suggesting that BCC may be an episodic diffuse central nervous system disorder.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27685362/