Article
Small Animal Practice Clinical Signs Respiratory Disease Companion Animal Medicine Gastrointestinal Disease Canine Distemper Virus CDV Disease Progression Neurological Signs

Recognizing Canine Distemper: Clinical Signs and Disease Progression

Canine distemper is one of the most significant viral diseases encountered in small animal practice because of its ability to affect multiple organ systems and produce a wide spectrum of clinical signs. Although vaccination has substantially reduced disease incidence, canine distemper virus (CDV) continues to be diagnosed in domestic dogs, particularly in unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated animals, with transmission also occurring between domestic and wild carnivores1,2

For veterinarians, early recognition is often challenging because the disease rarely follows a single clinical pattern. Patients may initially present with non-specific systemic illness before developing respiratory, gastrointestinal, dermatological, or neurological abnormalities. Understanding how the disease progresses allows clinicians to recognize suspected cases earlier and make informed decisions regarding further diagnostic evaluation and patient management. 

Understanding Disease Progression 

Following infection, CDV initially replicates in immune cells within the respiratory tract before spreading to regional lymphoid tissues. As viral replication continues, the virus enters the bloodstream and disseminates to epithelial tissues throughout the body. In susceptible dogs, viral spread eventually reaches the central nervous system, where neurological disease may develop. The severity and progression of infection depend on factors such as the dog's immune status, age, and viral virulence2,3

Because multiple organ systems become involved during disease progression, clinical signs often evolve over time rather than appearing simultaneously. This explains why repeated clinical assessment remains important in dogs with suspected distemper. 

Recognizing the Early Clinical Signs 

The initial clinical presentation of canine distemper can resemble several other infectious diseases, making careful physical examination and case history essential. 

Common early clinical findings include: 

  • Fever 
  • Lethargy 
  • Depression 
  • Reduced appetite 
  • Conjunctivitis 
  • Ocular and nasal discharge 
  • Cough 
  • Vomiting 
  • Diarrhea 

As the disease progresses, respiratory involvement may advance to bronchopneumonia, while gastrointestinal disease can contribute to dehydration and deterioration of the patient's general condition. Because CDV causes marked immunosuppression during the acute phase, secondary bacterial infections frequently complicate the clinical picture and may influence disease severity1,4

Some affected dogs also develop hyperkeratosis of the nasal planum and footpads, a characteristic finding in neurological cases that may provide an additional clinical clue during examination4,5

When Neurological Signs Develop 

Neurological involvement represents one of the most clinically significant stages of canine distemper. These signs may develop after systemic illness or become the predominant feature later in the disease course. 

Neurological manifestations may include: 

  • Myoclonus 
  • Seizures 
  • Ataxia 
  • Blindness 
  • Head tilt 
  • Circling 
  • Behavioral changes 
  • Paresis or paralysis 
  • Altered mentation 

Chewing-gum seizures, head rotation, imbalance, and progressive weakness have also been reported in affected dogs4,6

Importantly, neurological abnormalities do not always appear immediately after the onset of systemic illness. Some patients may initially show improvement before neurological disease becomes evident, making continued clinical monitoring essential throughout the course of illness7

Pathological Changes Associated with Clinical Disease 

The diverse clinical presentation of canine distemper reflects the virus's ability to damage multiple tissues while suppressing immune function. Lymphoid depletion, respiratory epithelial injury, gastrointestinal involvement, and central nervous system lesions all contribute to disease progression4

Within the nervous system, pathological findings may include neuronal degeneration, gliosis, non-inflammatory demyelination, perivascular cuffing, nonsuppurative leptomeningitis, and intranuclear inclusions in glial cells. Young puppies may exhibit thymic atrophy, while bronchopneumonia, enteritis, and skin pustules may develop depending on secondary infections4

These pathological changes explain why canine distemper often presents as a progressive multisystemic disease with considerable variation between individual patients. 

Conclusion 

Recognizing canine distemper requires veterinarians to evaluate the patient as a whole rather than focusing on a single body system. Early systemic illness can rapidly progress to respiratory, gastrointestinal, dermatological, and neurological involvement, with clinical manifestations varying according to disease stage and host factors. Familiarity with these evolving clinical patterns enables timely recognition of suspected cases and supports appropriate diagnostic investigation and clinical decision-making. 

References 

  1. Wilkes RP. Canine distemper virus in endangered species: species jump, clinical variations, and vaccination. Pathogens. 2022 Dec 29;12(1):57. https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0817/12/1/57 
  1. Franzo G, De Villiers L, Coetzee LM, De Villiers M, Nyathi FN, Garbade M, Hansen C, Berjaoui S, Ripà P, Lorusso A, Molini U. Unveiling the molecular epidemiology of canine distemper virus in Namibia: An expected pathogen showing an unexpected origin. Heliyon. 2024 Aug 15;10(15). https://www.cell.com/heliyon/fulltext/S2405-8440(24)10836-5?uuid=uuid%3A93e04475-9cdb-4a35-9550-28e3334ab8b1 
  1. Rivera-Martínez A, Rodríguez-Alarcón CA, Adame-Gallegos JR, Laredo-Tiscareño SV, de Luna-Santillana ED, Hernández-Triana LM, Garza-Hernández JA. Canine distemper virus: Origins, mutations, diagnosis, and epidemiology in Mexico. Life. 2024 Aug 13;14(8):1002. https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/14/8/1002 
  1. Solikhah TI, Alvaro AP, Putra AT, Ibrahim RA, Khairullah AR, Akram M. A review of canine distemper in domestic dogs. Journal of Advanced Veterinary Research. 2026 Jul 1;16(4):546-56. https://www.advetresearch.com/index.php/AVR/article/download/2565/1670 
  1. Johnson KL, Craig LE, Wilson S, McLarty E, Hespel AM. Radiographic evidence of metaphyseal sclerosis secondary to canine distemper virus: 4 cases in juvenile dogs. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine. 2022 Jul;36(4):1303-11. https://academic.oup.com/jvim/article-pdf/36/4/1303/66666071/jvim16453.pdf 
  1. Mojtahedzadeh SM, Jamshidi S, Langroudi AG, Vahedi SM, Tamai IA, Akbarein H, Moosavian H. Molecular detection of canine distemper virus among dogs showing neurologic and non-neurologic forms of disease. Iranian Journal of Veterinary Medicine. 2024 Jan 1;18(2):203-14. https://www.academia.edu/download/113125846/6.pdf 
  1. Freire HL, Iara ÍH, Ribeiro LS, Gonçalves PA, Matta DH, Torres BB. Neurological Manifestation of Canine Distemper Virus: Increased Risk in Young Shih Tzu and Lhasa Apso with Seasonal Prevalence in Autumn. Viruses. 2025 Jun 6;17(6):820. https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4915/17/6/820