
My old lab Summer had vestibular 3 times!
Just as described - distress (to the point of messing indoors which she hadn’t done since puppyhood), panting, shaking, head tilt, unable to stand or walk, eyes flicking sideways, lack of balance and co-ordination. The first time was by far the worst, the other two were easier because she didn’t panic nearly as much.
Recovery time varies a lot I think, but I do believe if you have the time and energy you can speed up recovery some. Basically the dog’s brain is getting totally wonky signals from the inner ear and the brain needs to learn how to understand this new “language”. If you provide the right combination of stimulation and rest the brain rewires itself faster.
I found it easiest to be with Summer in the garden as much possible, because she could hardly walk and it was too much for me to keep carrying her outside when she needed to wee. Luckily the weather co-operated! I also read that having the dog process visual information from natural sources like trees is more beneficial than all the unnatural straight lines indoors, so I figured it wouldn’t hurt.
She didn’t vomit but clearly felt terrible and refused food and water until I realised she was happy to crunch up ice cubes made from water I’d cooked liver in. I made a few batches of “meat water ice cubes” and that definitely helped her to regain interest in eating and drinking. Small amounts of soft mushy foods smeared on her lips so she could lick it off worked too.
I knew that getting feedback from moving her limbs would help recovery too so I tried to avoid carrying her and encouraged her to walk a little if she wanted to move (I lifted her up and down steps though). I used a towel under her chest/belly as a kind of sling to support her so she didn’t fall over but I made her use her legs (obviously only very small distances). I felt so mean but the sooner she got used to those faulty signals the sooner she’d get better.
Sleeping is also super important, so I let her sleep whenever she wanted. If she’d worked hard processing lots of visual information and walked a few feet and then had a nap for a couple of hours you could actually see a tiny bit of improvement when she woke up.
And obviously anything you can do to keep them calm helps as well. Summer liked long slow strokes, having me talk to her in a a low quiet calm voice (I read novels out loud to her), gentle massage, and licking my arms and her favourite toys. There’s tons of music designed for calming dogs on YouTube which is worth a try, and also those DAP diffusers could help.
With Summer’s first episode I think it took a little over a week to get her to the stage where she could walk unaided without falling all the time and she never really lost the head tilt, but she adapted. Second and third recoveries were much faster, probably only four or five days each.
She definitely lived a happy life afterwards and I was glad we worked through it rather than choosing to euthanise.