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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog in the US with brain cysts causing seizures from neural

By Bessemer, Bayla et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2026·The Ohio State University, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: associated with neural cysticercosis in a domestic dog in the United States.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 2-year-old spayed female mixed-breed dog was brought to the vet after experiencing seizures for three months. An MRI showed unusual cysts in her brain, but tests for a common parasite were negative. Despite treatment, her condition worsened, and she was euthanized after three months. A postmortem examination revealed that the cysts were caused by larval forms of a tapeworm, which had invaded her brain. This case is notable as it highlights a rare condition in dogs called neural cysticercosis, which had not been reported before.

People also search for: dog seizures treatment · mixed-breed dog brain cysts · canine neural cysticercosis symptoms

Abstract

A 2-y-old spayed female mixed-breed dog was presented with a 3-mo history of seizures. Coalescing intra-axial complex cystic lesions in the right cerebral hemisphere identified on MRI were suggestive of hydatid cysts; however, PCR testing of a fecal sample forspp. was negative. The dog was euthanized after 3 mo of treatment due to worsening signs and was submitted for postmortem examination. Coalescing 0.5-3-cm cavitations effaced ~20% of the left and 40% of the right cerebral hemispheres, and contained numerous 3-5-mm long ovoid-to-elongate, soft, white-to-clear metacestodes. Similar structures extended into the subarachnoid space. Histology revealed multiple larval cestodes consistent with invaginated cysticerci present in bladder compartments. Cysticerci each had a scolex, convoluted invaginated spiral canal, and spinous tegument with numerous calcareous corpuscles. Within many of the cysticerci, visible armed rostella had refractile hooklets and muscular suckers. Light microscopic evaluation of whole cysticerci preserved in ethanol revealed rostellar hooks with blade-to-guard length and handle-to-guard length that were within RIs for. Sequencing of DNA amplicons obtained via PCR confirmed 100% sequence identity to. To our knowledge, canine neural cysticercosis attributed tohas not been reported previously. Our case highlights the successful integration of multiple diagnostic modalities in a case of canine neural cysticercosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41263330/