Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How well MRI spots disc extrusion or bulge in dogs' lower back
By Shing, Hannah et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2023·Dick White Referrals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Accuracy of low-field magnetic resonance imaging for differentiating intervertebral disc extrusions and protrusions at the lumbosacral disc space in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with back problems underwent MRI to determine if they had either intervertebral disc extrusions (IVDE) or protrusions (IVDP) at the lumbosacral area of the spine. The study found that while MRI could help differentiate between the two conditions, the accuracy was lower than expected, with about 69% correct diagnoses overall. However, when the radiologists were more confident in their assessments, the accuracy improved to about 85%. This means that while MRI can be useful, it may not always provide clear answers for lumbosacral disc issues in dogs.
People also search for: dog back pain MRI · intervertebral disc disease in dogs · lumbosacral disc herniation treatment
Abstract
INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: MRI features differentiating extrusion from protrusion in thoracolumbar discs have been published, however little specifically evaluates the lumbosacral disc. The high prevalence of degenerative changes in apparently normal animals complicates assessment of this region and features relevant elsewhere in the spine may not apply. The aims of this study were to determine the accuracy of MRI in differentiating IVDE and IVDP at the lumbosacral disc space in dogs and determine which MRI characteristics discriminate between IVDE and IVDP. METHOD: MRI examinations from dogs with surgically confirmed IVDE or IVDP at the lumbosacral disc space were collected retrospectively (2011-2019). Two radiologists independently recorded a diagnosis of IVDE or IVDP, gave a confidence rating, and evaluated specific MRI features. Univariable statistical analysis was performed to identify which MRI characteristics might help distinguish IVDE from IVDP. RESULTS: 117 dogs with lumbosacral IVDE ( = 16) or IVDP ( = 101) were included. Features associated with IVDE were in concordance with previous studies and included interruption of the dorsal annulus, suspected epidural hemorrhage, dispersed (rather than confined) intervertebral disc herniation on T2W sagittal images, lateralized intervertebral disc herniation and displacement of the cauda equina. Overall diagnostic accuracy was 68.8% and interobserver agreement was fair (κ = 0.37), which is lower than has been reported in thoracolumbar disc herniation, but accuracy increased to 85.3% with substantially improved agreement (κ = 0.87) in "confident" diagnoses. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION: MRI characteristics used in differentiating thoracolumbar IVDE and IVDP can be extrapolated to the lumbosacral intervertebral disc space, but diagnostic accuracy in low-field MRI is lower than previously reported in herniations involving the thoracolumbar spine.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38026646/