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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

One-week-old Ayrshire calf with fluid-filled head swelling from birth

By Kisipan, Mosiany Letura et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2017·Department of Veterinary Anatomy and Physiology·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A case of cranium bifidum with meningocele in Ayrshire calf.

Species:
cattle
Brain & nerves

Plain-English summary

A one-week-old Ayrshire calf was brought in with a soft swelling on the back of its head and was always lying on its side. The calf showed discomfort when the area was touched, and a radiographic exam revealed a meningocele, which is a fluid-filled cyst caused by a defect in the skull. Unfortunately, the calf's condition was severe, and due to the damage to its brain from pressure, it was euthanized for humane reasons. The diagnosis was confirmed post-mortem, showing a bone defect in the skull.

People also search for: calf head swelling · meningocele in calves · Ayrshire calf euthanasia · congenital skull defects in calves

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Congenital cranial bone defects predispose to herniation of meninges, sometimes with brain tissue involvement, to form a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-filled cyst in the head. Such defects mainly results from focal failure of neural tube closure during fetal development and has been reported in various species of domestic mammals. CASE PRESENTATION: A one week old Ayrshire calf with a fluctuant swelling on parieto-occipital region of the head was referred to the faculty. The calf was always lying on lateral recumbency and exhibited resistance to deep palpation around the swelling and neck flexion. Embedded to the midline of the dorso-caudal surface of the cyst's wall was a hard longitudinally oriented structure. The case was diagnosed as meningocele by means of radiographic examination. As the likelihood to full recovery was greatly reduced due to the negative impact already meted on brain tissue by intracranial pressure, the calf was euthanized on grounds of animal welfare and the diagnosis confirmed by anatomopathological findings which also revealed a circular bone defect in parieto-occipital region of the skull vault and a flattened bony structure embedded to the cyst's wall. CONCLUSION: Anatomopathological findings confirmed the diagnosis as cranial bifidum with meningocele at the parieto-occipital region of the skull vault. The presence of a bony structure embedded to the wall of meningeal sac was rather unusual and could not be sufficiently explained. It was however thought to, most likely, represent a part of interparietal bone that failed to get incorporated into squamous part of occipital bone as a result of the defect. The report also highlights challenges that work against timely delivery of urgent veterinary interventions in rural set ups of Africa and rest of the developing world, often leaving veterinarians with animal welfare consideration as main determinant of intervention measures.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28086878/