How Can You Determine If Your Dog Has PTSD?Â
 Originally published in “My Puppy, My Self,” at PsychologyToday.com, August 8, 2012.
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âReactivityâ in Dogs
I got the following email message the other day from a company called Dogwise. They publish and sell books primarily about reward-based dog training.Â
âProbably the hottest topic in dog behavior and training circles right now is reactivity. You may never be able to âcureâ a dog who is reactiveâitâs hard to counter poor socialization and/or geneticsâbut there are a number of ways you may be able to control it, at least some of the time…â
My first reaction was to the word âreactive.â Iâve never understood how or why that term is being applied to behavior problems in dogs. It seems to me that if a dog doesnât react to stimuli, thatâs when heâs got serious physical, emotional or behavioral problems.Â
Then, when the blurb informed me that âyou may never be able to âcureâ a dog who is reactive,â I chalked that up to the fact that behavioral science techniques are usually ineffective, or at the very least only mildly effective, at solving most behavioral problems in dogs, because in my experience theyâre geared to focus on changing outward behaviors rather than finding and changing the underlying cause.Â
But as I thought more about it I realized that a very high percentage of the dogs being described as âreactive,â are actually over-reacting to stimuli, which suggests that they may be suffering from Canine PTSD, which is, indeed, very âdifficult to cure.âÂ
Stress: The Underlying Cause
The database of the National Technical Information Serviceâan agency of the U.S. Governmentâshows that as many as 70% of individuals [human beings] living in the United States have experienced at least one serious traumatic event during their lifetime. But according to investigators at Boston University School of Medicine only 8% of those people whoâve experienced some form of trauma have developed PTSD as a result.Â
Unfortunately, we donât have a database showing the percentage of dogs whoâve experienced trauma. But given the number of dogs abandoned or brought to shelters every year, plus the number injured in fights with other dogs, and the number whoâve been mistreated by their owners, or mishandled by their trainers, groomers or vet techs (it happens), not to mention those whoâve been struck by a car, gotten lost, were fought over during a divorce, etc, etc, etc, I would be very surprised if the number of dogs whoâve experienced some type of trauma wasnât at least 70%. And Iâd also be surprised if the number of dogs whoâve developed symptoms of PTSD as a result of such wasnât very close to the figure of 8% found in human beings.Â
This would suggests that since there are roughly 75 million pet dogs in America, thereâs a real possibility that more than 6 million American dogs might have PTSD.Â
Meanwhile, The New York Times reports that âmore than 5 percent of the approximately 650 deployed military dogs are developing some form of canine PTSD,â meaning that there are only 30 or so whoâve developed the disorder. Granted, in working military dogs the symptoms are usually much more severe than what see in pet dogs. But the problem still exists pet dogs, and in much larger numbers.Â
So when does a traumatic event of any kind stay a one-time thing, and when does it actually cause PTSD? And can we apply any of the criteria used in diagnosing PTSD in humans to diagnose our dogs as well?Â
I think so.Â
Diagnosing Canine PTSD
In humans, PTSD is not just caused by a traumatic experience, but one that causes a tremendous amount of stress. The traumatic event causes the body to release a cocktail of hormones and neurochemicals specifically designed to deal with that stress. But in large doses those chemical agents also can reportedly cause the same or similar kinds of neurological damage found in patients with a traumatic brain injury (TBI). This can adversely affect mood, memory and learning in deep and lasting ways. (See: âDoes PTSD Cause Brain Damage in Dogs?â) *
Since much of the literature on how stress affects memory, learning, and behavior in humans comes from animal studiesâprimarily on rats and miceâand since a dogâs body produces the same basic kinds of stress hormones produced by rats and humans, itâs very likely that dogsâeven pet dogsâcan develop symptoms of PTSD.Â
In humans these symptoms include re-experiencing the original trauma, fearful avoidance of stimuli associated with that event, and increased forms of arousal such as an sleep disturbances, rage, aggression, and lastly hypervigilance, or in the lingua obscura of some dog trainers: âreactivity.âÂ
Granted, our lives are much more complicated and stressful than the kind our dogs lead. A human being can develop PTSD simply by observing the scene of an accident or natural disaster. Some can develop symptoms just by looking at videos or photographs. Dogs arenât as deeply affected by the passive observation of horrific events as we are.Â
On the other hand, there are far more cultural taboos and legal restrictions against doing harm to human beings than there are about hurting dogs. Remember, up until a few years ago the most popular training book in AmericaâHow to Be Your Dogâs Best Friend, by the Monks of New Sketeâcontained the following âtrainingâ advice: âHow hard should you hit your dog? If she doesnât yelp in pain you havenât hit her hard enough.âÂ
Hurting dogs is pervasive in our country. People like Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Michael Vickâwho spent time in prison for running a dog-fighting ring out of his homeâare just a drop in the bucket in terms of the kind of people out there brutalizing dogs on a regular basis.
With all that in mind I would be very surprised to find that the number of dogs in America who have Canine PTSD isnât more than double or even triple the 6 million I suggested above.Â
Diagnostic Signs of PTSD in Human Beings
- Criterion A â Exposure to a traumatic stressor.Â
- Criterion B â Re-experiencing the event (flashbacks).Â
- Criterion C â Avoidance and numbing.Â
- Criterion D â Hyperarousal.Â
- Criterion E â Duration of symptoms for at least 1 month.Â
- Criterion F â Significant impairment of normal functioning.Â
Personally, I think dogs can exhibit all 5 of these signs and symptoms. The only one that might seem controversial is the idea that dogs can have âflashbacks.â I think that depends on how we view the differences between how memory operates in humans and dogs.
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In human beings, memory operates on three basic levels: physical (i.e., unconscious or procedural) memory, emotional (or affective) memory, and mental, or declarative memory (which includes semantic, episodic, and autobiographical memory). Only the last requires both a sense of self and a linear sense of time (knowing that thereâs a past, present, and future), forms of cognition that dogs donât have (or donât seem to).Â
In human subjects, flashbacks come primarily from sense memory; the sound of chopper blades for example. This then triggers emotional memory, where the fear, panic and helplessness experienced during the original trauma, come flooding back, raising blood pressure, releasing stress hormones, etc, etc. In many cases, the subject doesnât even realize that he or she is not actually safe in bed or hiding in the closet, but is convinced that he or she is back on the battlefield or is about to be sexually assaulted, etc.Â
It seems to me that dogs are quite capable of experiencing both sense memory and emotional memory. In fact, the work of two Russiansâphysiologist Ivan Pavlov and theater director (and inventor of âmethod actingâ) Constantin Stanislavskyâshow quite clearly that sense memory and emotional memory are inextricably linked.Â
I should point out that the 5 diagnostic criteria I mentioned above are only broad categories, and that there are many much finer points to be looked at when diagnosing PTSD in humans. I think the same should hold true for diagnosing Canine PTSD as well.Â
To help with thisIâve created a mock-up for a potential Canine PTSD questionnaire to be filled out by a dogâs owner, veterinarian, trainer or behaviorist. It can be found by clicking here. (I would be very interested in getting feedback, whether some things should be added, subtracted, or tossed out altogether.)Â
Please keep in mind that most of what Iâm saying is hypothetical. We need more research, we need to create a much larger yet credible database. We need to start thinking along new lines. PTSD is not something that can only happen to human beings, or to our military dogs. Those brave and hardworking four-legged members of our armed forces are showing us that thereâs a much larger problem right under our noses, affecting millions of American doggies, animals who are currently nestled safely on their doggie beds or sleeping on our couches, and yet who may be in emotional distress and need our help.Â
If you agree with or relate to anything Iâve said, please pass it on to your vet, dog trainer, and anyone else you think might be able to help us move forward in making this problem more widely known.Â
I firmly believe that Canine PTSD is a very real condition that can be found in a great many pet dogs, and we need to start addressing it now.
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