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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with balance problems and vomiting treated for brain tumor surgery

By Jeong, Jaemin et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2024·Department of Veterinary Surgery, South Korea·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Case report: Gross total resection of a primary fourth ventricular meningioma using the telovelar approach in a dog.

Species:
dog
Dog vomitingBrain & nervesDogs

Plain-English summary

An 11-year-old spayed female Maltese dog was brought in after two months of changes in her walking, a wide stance, and frequent vomiting. A neurological exam showed signs like head tilt and tremors, and an MRI revealed a tumor in her brain. The tumor was successfully removed through surgery, and although she initially had some difficulty walking afterward, she regained her ability to walk within a week. After 15 months, she still had a slight head tilt but was otherwise doing well with no signs of tumor recurrence.

People also search for: dog vomiting and balance issues · Maltese dog brain tumor treatment · dog head tilt after surgery

Abstract

An 11-year-old spayed female Maltese dog presented with a 2-month history of gait alterations, wide-based stance, and chronic vomiting. Neurological examination revealed cerebellovestibular signs, including head tilt, nystagmus, strabismus, intentional tremor, and hypermetric gait. MRI showed a mass with iso- to hypointensity on T1-weighted (T1W) images and heterogeneous hyperintensity on T2-weighted (T2W) images, with marked non-uniform contrast enhancement. The tumor was removed via a telovelar approach without intraoperative complications. Postoperatively, the dog developed non-ambulatory paraparesis with the rigidity of the pelvic limbs but recovered ambulation within 6 days. Preoperative neurological signs progressively improved, and the patient was discharged without complications 10 days after surgery. Histological examination revealed dense spindle cells with an abundant collagen matrix and oval-shaped nucleated cells with small whorls, leading to a diagnosis of transitional meningioma of the fourth ventricle. MRI follow-up at 8 months postoperatively showed no definitive evidence of recurrence. At the final follow-up, 15.4 months postoperatively, mild neurological signs, including a slight head tilt and subtle strabismus, remained, but the rest of the neurological examination was normal. This is the first reported case of a meningioma in the fourth ventricle of a dog successfully removed using the telovelar approach.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39239391/