The Canine Stroke Initiative

Clear answers when your dog needs them most.

Canine stroke is confusing, isolating, and often misunderstood. The Canine Stroke Initiative exists to change that — providing evidence-based information, practical resources, and real support for caregivers navigating neurological conditions in dogs.

— Inspired by Finley, who meets every milestone in physical therapy with the kind of joy that makes all of this worthwhile.

Finley — the dog who inspired this initiative Finley

Most dogs with stroke signs are never accurately diagnosed

This is not a rare failure. It is what the data shows happens routinely — at the primary care level, across the country, every day.

8 per 10,000

Annual prevalence

In a study of more than 905,000 dogs under UK primary veterinary care, vestibular disease occurred at a rate of approximately 8 per 10,000 dogs annually — making it a common and consequential neurological presentation in general practice.

Radulescu et al., J Vet Intern Med, 2020; 34(5):1993–2004
3.6%

Referred to a specialist

Of dogs presenting with vestibular signs at primary care practices, only 3.6% are ever referred to a veterinary neurologist. More than 96% never reach the level of care where a confirmed diagnosis is possible.

Radulescu et al., J Vet Intern Med, 2020; 34(5):1993–2004
4.34%

Received a documented diagnosis

Only 4.34% of vestibular cases at the primary care level had any specific cause documented in the clinical record. The remaining 95.66% were managed and discharged without a formal diagnosis.

Radulescu et al., J Vet Intern Med, 2020; 34(5):1993–2004
22.6%

Mislocalized without imaging

When imaging was performed, clinical examination alone failed to confirm peripheral localization in 22.6% of dogs initially assessed as peripheral vestibular disease. Accurate lesion localization carries significant implications for prognosis and treatment planning.

Bongartz et al., J Small Anim Pract, 2020; 61(1):57–63

The word "idiopathic" means the cause is unknown — and in canine vestibular disease, it often reflects a genuinely difficult clinical picture. Vestibular signs can look nearly identical whether the cause is benign or serious, and many dogs do recover on their own. But the data suggests that the tools to look further — a senior blood panel, a blood pressure measurement, a specialist referral — are used far less often than the situation warrants.

Those tools are low-cost and accessible. Blood pressure measurement and basic bloodwork can identify the conditions most likely to cause repeat events, and early identification changes what happens next. The challenge is not a lack of care from veterinary professionals — it is a lack of accessible, organized information connecting the clinical picture to those next steps.

That is the gap the Canine Stroke Initiative exists to address: clear resources for caregivers who need to know what questions to ask, and for veterinary professionals who want organized, evidence-based support to bring to these cases.

Radulescu SM, et al. Vestibular disease in dogs under primary veterinary care in the UK. J Vet Intern Med. 2020;34(5):1993–2004. DOI: 10.1111/jvim.15869
Bongartz U, et al. Diagnostic accuracy of neurological examination in dogs with vestibular disease. J Small Anim Pract. 2020;61(1):57–63. DOI: 10.1111/jsap.13070
AVMA Pet Ownership and Demographics Sourcebook. 2024/2025.

Information that actually helps

When a dog has a stroke, the people caring for them are often left with more questions than answers. What happened? What comes next? What should I be asking the vet? The Canine Stroke Initiative builds resources designed to answer those questions clearly — grounded in current veterinary knowledge, free of speculation, and built for the people who need them most.

This is not only a resource for caregivers. Veterinary professionals and researchers will find a centralized, organized body of knowledge on canine cerebrovascular disease — case documentation, peer-reviewed research, and specialist connections that are currently scattered or difficult to access. The Initiative exists to raise the standard of information available to everyone in this space.

We do not diagnose, treat, or replace veterinary care. Our role is to support, guide, and help caregivers ask better questions alongside qualified professionals.

Resources coming to this site

🔬

Research Database

A curated, searchable library of peer-reviewed veterinary research on canine stroke and cerebrovascular disease — organized for both professionals and informed caregivers.

🗂

Case Study Database

Documented real-world cases illustrating how canine cerebrovascular events present, progress, and respond to care — bridging clinical knowledge and lived experience.

🩺

Specialist Directory

A searchable database of veterinary neurologists, internists, and rehabilitation specialists to help families find qualified professionals when they need them most.

📋

Case Report Submissions

Pet owners and veterinary professionals will be able to submit case reports directly, contributing to a growing body of real-world documentation that benefits the entire field.

📖

Caregiver Guides

Plain-language resources on stroke symptoms, vestibular disease, recovery timelines, and how to advocate effectively alongside your veterinary team.

Be the first to know when we launch

Whether you are a caregiver, a veterinary professional, or someone who wants to help build this — we want to hear from you.

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No spam. Updates only when they are ready.