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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Female dogs with chronic osteoarthritis have worse memory than males

By Smith, Melissa et al.·Published in Animal cognition·2024·Bristol Veterinary School, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Spatial working memory in a disappearing object task is impaired in female but not male dogs with chronic osteoarthritis.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study found that female dogs with chronic osteoarthritis (a type of joint pain) had trouble with memory tasks compared to healthy dogs. Specifically, when asked to remember where an object had disappeared, these female dogs performed worse than their healthy counterparts, especially as the time between seeing the object and recalling it increased. Male dogs with the same condition did not show the same memory issues. This suggests that chronic pain can affect a dog's ability to think and remember, which might impact their quality of life. More research is needed to understand why female dogs are particularly affected.

People also search for: dog memory problems · female dog osteoarthritis symptoms · how does arthritis affect dog behavior

Abstract

Chronic pain in humans is associated with impaired working memory but it is not known whether this is the case in long-lived companion animals, such as dogs, who are especially vulnerable to developing age-related chronic pain conditions. Pain-related impairment of cognitive function could have detrimental effects on an animal's ability to engage with its owners and environment or to respond to training or novel situations, which may in turn affect its quality of life. This study compared the performance of 20 dogs with chronic pain from osteoarthritis and 21 healthy control dogs in a disappearing object task of spatial working memory. Female neutered osteoarthritic dogs, but not male neutered osteoarthritic dogs, were found to have lower predicted probabilities of successfully performing the task compared to control dogs of the same sex. In addition, as memory retention interval in the task increased, osteoarthritic dogs showed a steeper decline in working memory performance than control dogs. This suggests that the effects of osteoarthritis, and potentially other pain-related conditions, on cognitive function are more clearly revealed in tasks that present a greater cognitive load. Our finding that chronic pain from osteoarthritis may be associated with impaired working memory in dogs parallels results from studies of human chronic pain disorders. That female dogs may be particularly prone to these effects warrants further investigation.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38429533/