Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
MRI and myelography accuracy in small dogs with first-time disk
By Bos, Alexandra Squires et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2012·Ontario Veterinary College, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Accuracy, intermethod agreement, and inter-reviewer agreement for use of magnetic resonance imaging and myelography in small-breed dogs with naturally occurring first-time intervertebral disk extrusion.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of small-breed dogs with back problems caused by intervertebral disk extrusion (a condition where the disk bulges out and presses on the spinal cord) underwent two types of imaging: MRI and myelography. The results showed that both imaging methods were quite accurate in identifying the location of the problem, but MRI was found to be more reliable overall. In fact, MRI had a perfect accuracy rate for locating the issue, while myelography was slightly less accurate. This means that if your small dog is experiencing back pain, an MRI might provide the best information for treatment options.
People also search for: small dog back pain treatment · intervertebral disk extrusion MRI · myelography for dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine accuracy, intermethod agreement, and inter-reviewer agreement for multisequence magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and 2-view orthogonal myelography in small-breed dogs with first-time intervertebral disk (IVD) extrusion. DESIGN: Prospective evaluation study. ANIMALS: 24 dogs with thoracolumbar IVD extrusion. PROCEDURES: Each dog underwent MRI and myelography. Images obtained with each modality were independently evaluated and assigned standardized scores in a blinded manner by 3 reviewers. Results were compared with surgical findings. Inter-reviewer and intermethod agreements were assessed via κ statistics. Accuracy was assessed as the percentage of dogs for which ≥ 2 of 3 reviewers recorded findings identical to those determined surgically. RESULTS: Inter-reviewer agreement was substantial for site (κ = 0.70) and side of IVD extrusion (κ = 0.62) in T2-weighted magnetic resonance images and was substantial for site (κ = 0.72) and fair for side of extrusion (κ = 0.37) in myelographic images. Agreement for site between each modality and surgical findings was near perfect (κ = 0.94 and 0.88 for MRI and myelography, respectively). Intermethod agreement was substantial for site (κ = 0.71) and moderate for side of extrusion (κ = 0.40). Accuracy of MRI for site and side was 100% when results for T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and contrast-enhanced T1-weighted sequences were combined. Accuracy of myelography was 90.9% and 54.5% for site and side, respectively. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Agreement between imaging results and surgical findings for identification of IVD extrusion sites in small-breed dogs was similar for MRI and myelography. However, MRI appeared to be more accurate than myelography and allowed evaluation of extradural compressive mass composition.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22471826/