SYMPTOM
Sudden onset lameness
A rapid onset of limping or inability to bear weight on a leg, appearing without gradual progression.
Soft Tissue Injury
Sprains, strains, and tears of muscles, tendons, and ligaments are common causes of sudden-onset lameness, particularly following vigorous activity, rough play, or awkward landings. These injuries disrupt the normal mechanical function of the affected limb and produce pain that is typically most severe immediately after the injury and may worsen with continued use. The degree of lameness can range from mild favouring of the limb to complete non-weight-bearing, depending on the severity and location of the tissue damage.
Cruciate Ligament Rupture
The cranial cruciate ligament is a frequent site of injury in dogs, and its rupture produces sudden, often dramatic hind limb lameness. The ligament may fail acutely during a specific incident — such as a sudden turn, jump, or vigorous play — or may represent the final failure of a ligament that has been progressively weakening over time. The resulting stifle instability produces significant pain and swelling, and the dog typically holds the affected leg up or barely touches the toe to the ground. In some cases, the opposite limb's cruciate ligament may be under similar degenerative stress.
Fracture
Broken bones produce immediate, severe lameness as the structural integrity of the affected limb is compromised. Fractures can result from trauma such as falls, vehicular incidents, or impacts, but pathological fractures can also occur through bone weakened by disease processes such as bone tumours or metabolic bone disease. The lameness associated with fractures is typically non-weight-bearing, and there may be visible swelling, abnormal angulation, or crepitus at the fracture site. The affected limb may appear shortened or rotated compared with the normal contralateral limb.
Joint Luxation or Subluxation
Dislocation of a joint produces sudden lameness as the normal articulation between bones is disrupted. Patellar luxation, hip luxation, and elbow luxation can all produce acute lameness, though some of these conditions may also occur intermittently in milder forms. The degree of lameness depends on the joint affected, the completeness of the displacement, and whether the luxation can reduce spontaneously. Some luxations produce intermittent lameness where the joint displaces and then returns to position, creating a characteristic on-and-off pattern.
Foreign Body or Paw Injury
Objects embedded in the paw pads, between the toes, or in the footpad can produce sudden lameness that may appear disproportionately severe relative to the size of the foreign body. Thorns, grass seeds, splinters, glass fragments, and sharp stones can penetrate the soft tissues of the foot and cause immediate pain with each weight-bearing step. Burns from hot pavement, chemical irritation, or nail injuries including broken or torn nails can also produce acute-onset lameness affecting one or more limbs.
Vascular
Sudden interruption of blood supply to a limb, such as may occur with aortic thromboembolism (particularly common in cats with underlying heart disease), can produce dramatic acute-onset lameness or paralysis. Feline aortic thromboembolism typically affects the hind limbs and produces sudden pain, loss of motor function, and cold, painful limbs with absent or reduced pulses. In dogs, vascular causes of acute lameness are less common but can occur with certain systemic conditions that predispose to clot formation.
Why timing matters
Early observation
The immediate presentation of sudden-onset lameness often provides the most diagnostic information. Observations made in the first minutes to hours — which limb is affected, whether the animal bears any weight at all, whether the lameness followed an identifiable incident, and the animal's overall demeanour — can all help characterise the nature and severity of the injury. Some causes of acute lameness, particularly minor soft tissue injuries and foreign bodies, may begin to improve relatively quickly, while others may remain severe or worsen over the initial hours.
Later presentation
The trajectory of lameness over the first hours to days provides important information about the underlying cause. Lameness that progressively improves over 24 to 48 hours may suggest a minor soft tissue injury that is healing naturally. Lameness that remains constant or worsens may indicate a more significant structural injury such as a fracture or complete ligament rupture. Swelling that develops or increases over the hours following onset can help localise the site of injury and may indicate ongoing inflammation or haemorrhage within the affected tissues.
The expected recovery trajectory varies significantly with the cause. Minor muscle strains may resolve over days to a week. Ligament injuries may show initial improvement followed by a plateau as the structural instability persists. Fractures will not resolve without appropriate intervention. Foreign body lameness may worsen if the object migrates deeper into the tissues. Vascular causes may show rapid progression to more severe limb compromise. Noting whether the lameness is improving, stable, or worsening — and how quickly any changes are occurring — helps characterise the underlying cause and its expected course.
Conditions commonly associated
Cruciate Ligament Disease in Dogs
Intervertebral Disc Disease in Dogs
Osteosarcoma in Dogs
Sudden onset severe lameness may occur when osteosarcoma causes a pathological fracture through the weakened, tumour-infiltrated bone, transforming what may have been a subtle chronic lameness into acute non-weight-bearing lameness.
Osteosarcoma
Osteosarcoma commonly causes progressive lameness as the tumour erodes bone and creates pain in the affected limb.
Feline Calicivirus
Some calicivirus strains cause joint inflammation resulting in shifting leg lameness.
Osteochondritis Dissecans (OCD)
OCD causes lameness due to pain from cartilage damage and mechanical interference from loose fragments within the joint.
Legg-Calvé-Perthes Disease
Legg-Calvé-Perthes causes progressive hind leg lameness as the femoral head deteriorates and collapses.
Acral Lick Dermatitis
If the lesion becomes severely infected or painful, or if underlying joint disease is present, limping may occur.
When to explore further
Non-weight-bearing lameness — where the animal holds the affected limb completely off the ground and refuses to place any weight on it — suggests a more severe injury than partial weight-bearing lameness. The complete avoidance of weight-bearing may indicate a fracture, complete ligament rupture, joint luxation, or severe soft tissue injury.
Sudden hind limb lameness or paralysis in a cat, particularly if both hind limbs are affected and the limbs feel cold to the touch, may suggest a vascular event such as aortic thromboembolism. This presentation can develop within minutes and may be accompanied by vocalisation and signs of significant distress.
Lameness that persists without improvement for more than 24 to 48 hours, or that worsens progressively after the initial onset, may suggest an injury that is unlikely to resolve without veterinary assessment. The failure to improve with rest can help distinguish more significant injuries from minor strains.
Visible deformity of the affected limb — including abnormal angulation, significant swelling, or an obviously different appearance compared with the opposite limb — may suggest a fracture or luxation that has altered the limb's structural alignment.
Sudden lameness that occurs without any identified precipitating event, particularly in an older animal, may raise different considerations compared with trauma-related lameness. Pathological fractures through weakened bone, and certain bone tumours, can produce sudden lameness that appears to occur spontaneously.
Restricting the animal's activity by confining it to a small, comfortable area and preventing running, jumping, and stair use helps protect the injured limb from further damage during the initial period. Gently examining the affected limb for visible wounds, swelling, foreign bodies in the paw, broken nails, or areas of particular sensitivity can sometimes identify the cause. Comparing the affected limb with the opposite normal limb can help identify swelling, temperature differences, or positional abnormalities. If the lameness is severe, non-weight-bearing, or does not show signs of improvement within 24 to 48 hours, these observations provide valuable information for veterinary consultation.
Last reviewed: 24 April 2026 · Dr Alastair Greenway MRCVS