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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Sudden paralysis in two large breed dogs from missing neck bone

By Stigen, Øyvind et al.·Published in Acta veterinaria Scandinavica·2013·Department of Companion Animal Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Acute non-ambulatory tetraparesis with absence of the dens in two large breed dogs: case reports with a radiographic study of relatives.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A young German shepherd and a Standard poodle both suddenly lost the ability to walk due to a serious spinal issue. After thorough examinations, it was found that both dogs had a condition called atlantoaxial instability, which involves a critical spinal cord injury and an absence of a bone called the dens. Unfortunately, both dogs were euthanized within a week of showing symptoms. The study suggests that this condition may be inherited in Standard poodles, as several of the poodle's relatives also showed similar bone abnormalities.

People also search for: why is my dog not walking · German shepherd spinal injury · Standard poodle inherited conditions

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Non-ambulatory tetraparesis with an absence of the dens of C2 (axis) has not previously been reported in large breed dogs. An absence or hypoplasia of the dens has been reported in both small, medium and large breed dogs, but not in closely related animals. METHODS: Two young large-breed dogs (a German shepherd and a Standard poodle) both with an acute onset of non-ambulatory tetraparesis were subjected to physical, neurological and radiographic examinations. Both dogs were euthanased and submitted for postmortem examination within one week of onset of clinical signs. To investigate possible heritability of dens abnormalities, oblique radiographs of the cranial cervical vertebrae were taken of nine and eighteen dogs related to the German shepherd and the Standard poodle, respectively. RESULTS: Absence of the dens, atlantoaxial instability and extensive spinal cord injury was found in both case dogs. Radiographs revealed a normal dens in both parents and in the seven littermates of the German shepherd. An absence or hypoplasia of the dens was diagnosed in six relatives of the Standard poodle. CONCLUSIONS: Atlantoaxial subluxation with cervical spinal cord injury should be considered as a differential diagnosis in non-ambulatory tetraparetic young large breed dogs. Absence of the dens and no history of external trauma increase the likelihood for this diagnosis. This study provides evidence to suggest that absence or hypoplasia of the dens is inherited in an autosomal way in Standard poodle dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23591104/