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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Canine dysautonomia in 10-week-old Havanese puppies after outdoor

By Hull, Noah C et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2015·Department of Veterinary Sciences·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Canine dysautonomia in a litter of Havanese puppies.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Four 10-week-old Havanese puppies developed serious health issues after being exposed to the outdoors, showing signs of a rare and often fatal condition called canine dysautonomia. Symptoms appeared about 10 to 16 days after their outdoor exposure, while their one healthy littermate stayed indoors and did not get sick. All affected puppies showed significant nerve damage when examined by a vet. Unfortunately, this condition can be very serious, and the puppies' prognosis is generally poor. If you notice unusual symptoms in your puppy after outdoor exposure, it’s important to consult your veterinarian right away.

People also search for: Havanese puppy symptoms · canine dysautonomia treatment · puppy health problems after going outside · what is canine dysautonomia

Abstract

Canine dysautonomia is a sporadic, generally fatal disease that rarely affects groups of related animals. Four 10-week-old Havanese puppies from a litter of 5 developed clinical signs of canine dysautonomia. The 4 affected dogs were exposed to an outdoor environment, whereas the fifth littermate was not exposed to the outdoors and remained clinically healthy. Clinical signs of dysautonomia developed 10-16 days after going outside the house. An unrelated dog also developed dysautonomia after exposure to 1 of the affected Havanese littermates. All 5 dogs had morphological changes consistent with dysautonomia (widespread neuronal degeneration in autonomic ganglia, select brainstem nuclei, and ventral horn motor neurons). Differential diagnoses were excluded through negative toxicological evaluation, fecal parasite screening, negative Canine distemper virus reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, fluorescent antibody testing, attempted virus isolation, and electron microscopy. The 5 affected dogs were in the Kansas City, Missouri area, where there is a high incidence of dysautonomia.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26179098/