Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with neck tumor and weakness improves after surgery
By Junyoung Kim et al.·Published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science·2024·N Animal Medical Center, Seoul, Republic of Korea, CH·View original on DOAJ →
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Original publication title: Case report: Magnetic resonance imaging features with postoperative improvement of atypical cervical glioma characterized by predominant extramedullary distribution in a dog
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 9-year-old female Maltese dog was brought in with a hunched back, weakness on the left side, and a reduced appetite. After a couple of days, she became unable to walk. An MRI showed a tumor in her cervical spine that was pressing on the spinal cord. The tumor was surgically removed, and within two weeks after the surgery, the dog’s neurological symptoms improved significantly, returning to normal.
People also search for: dog neck pain · Maltese dog weakness · dog spinal tumor treatment · dog surgery recovery · dog MRI results
Abstract
IntroductionIntramedullary cord tumors present diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. Furthermore, spinal cord tumors can move across compartments, making antemortem diagnosis difficult, even with advanced imaging. This report presents a rare case of a cranial cervical spinal glioma, confirmed by surgical histopathology, with postoperative improvement in a dog.Case descriptionA 9-year-old female Maltese dog presented with kyphotic posture, progressive left hemiparesis, and decreased appetite. Neurological examination revealed neck pain and decreased proprioception in the left limbs along with intact deep pain perception. Two days later, the patient developed non-ambulatory tetraparesis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed an ovoid, well-defined mass with homogeneously marked contrast enhancement in the second cervical spinal cord that severely compressed the spinal cord. This mass was heterogeneously hyperintense on T2-weighted images and iso-to-hypointense on T1-weighted images, showing an appearance resembling the “golf-tee” and “dural tail” signs. The MRI findings suggested an intradural extramedullary tumor. Intraoperatively, a well-demarcated mass which was locally adherent to the spinal meninges was removed. Both histopathological and genomic tumor tests were indicative of a glioma. Approximately 2 weeks postoperatively, the patient’s neurological signs returned to normal.ConclusionThis case report describes an atypical cervical glioma with complicated MR characteristics in a dog, where MRI helped guide surgical intervention.
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Search related cases →Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2024.1400139