Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with extra pelvic limbs and duplicated tail area examined
By Grimes, Janet A et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2018·From the Department of Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A Case of Parasitic Twinning or Caudal Duplication in a Dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 6-month-old male American Staffordshire Terrier was brought to the vet because he had extra pelvic limbs and a smelly discharge from an extra penis. After imaging tests, the vet found that he had a rare condition called caudal duplication, which included an extra pelvis and limbs, along with some kidney and intestinal abnormalities. During surgery, the vet removed the extra kidney, parts of the colon, and other abnormal tissues, but left the extra pelvis and limbs intact. Five months later, the dog was reported to be doing well and recovering from the surgery.
People also search for: dog with extra limbs · American Staffordshire Terrier surgery · smelly discharge from dog penis · dog kidney problems · caudal duplication in dogs
Abstract
A 6 mo old 13.5 kg (29.7 lb) male intact American Staffordshire terrier was evaluated for a history of supernumerary pelvic limbs, with malodorous discharge from a supernumerary penis. Imaging (radiographs, abdominal ultrasound, and computed tomography with excretory urogram) showed a supernumerary pelvis with associated pelvic limbs, no osseous continuity with the primary spinal column, a colonic diverticulum extending to the supernumerary pelvis, an enlarged left kidney with a ureter connecting to a single bladder, right renal aplasia, a single descended testicle in the primary scrotum, an intra-abdominal cryptorchid testicle, and two unidentifiable soft tissue masses. At surgery, a single ileum was present with a primary and accessory cecum and colon and the accessory colon entering the supernumerary pelvis. The accessory cecum and colon, right kidney, two unknown soft tissue masses, and the single descended testicle were removed. The right kidney had a ureter that anastomosed with the accessory colon at its entry into the supernumerary pelvis. The supernumerary pelvis and hind limbs were not removed. Five months after surgery, the dog was reported to be doing well clinically. Caudal duplication is extremely rare in veterinary medicine. The appearance of supernumerary external structures may indicate internal connections as well.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29757668/