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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with severe neck spinal cord bleeding after car accident

By Koen M. Santifort et al.·Published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science·2023·IVC Evidensia Small Animal Referral Hospital Arnhem, Neurology, Arnhem, Netherlands, CH·View original on DOAJ

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Original publication title: Case report: Traumatic hemorrhagic cervical myelopathy in a dog

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 1.5-year-old female French bulldog was brought in for severe weakness and inability to walk after being hit by a car. After emergency care, an MRI showed a serious spinal injury at the C2 level, along with damage to the nerves in her right front leg. The vet decided on a conservative treatment plan that included pain medication, physiotherapy, and bladder care with a catheter. After a few weeks, the dog started to regain some movement and was able to walk again, although she still had some weakness in her right leg. By three months after the accident, she was ambulatory with mild coordination issues.

People also search for: French bulldog car accident recovery · dog spinal injury treatment · how to help my dog walk again after injury

Abstract

A 1.5-year-old female entire French bulldog was referred for neurological evaluation, further diagnostic tests, and treatment 24 h after a road traffic accident. Initial emergency treatment, diagnostic tests, and stabilization had been performed by the referring veterinarian. Neurological examination revealed severe spastic non-ambulatory tetraparesis and was consistent with a C1-5 myelopathy. A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study revealed an irregular to elongated ovoid intramedullary lesion centered over the body of C2. The lesion showed marked signal heterogeneity with a central T2W and T2* hyperintense region, surrounded by a hypointense rim on both sequences. The lesion appeared heterogeneously T1W hypointense. The lesion was asymmetric (right-sided), affecting both white and gray matter. The C2-3 intervertebral disk appeared moderately degenerate with a Pfirrmann grade of 3. No evidence of vertebral fracture or luxation was found on radiographs or MRI of the vertebral column. Additional soft tissue abnormalities in the area of the right brachial plexus were suggestive of brachial plexus and muscle injury. A diagnosis of traumatic hemorrhagic myelopathy at the level of C2 and concurrent brachial plexus injury was formed. Conservative treatment was elected and consisted of physiotherapy, bladder care with an indwelling urinary catheter, repeated IV methadone based on pain scoring (0.2 mg/kg), oral meloxicam 0.1 mg/kg q24h, and oral gabapentin 10 mg/kg q8h. The dog was discharged after 4 days, with an indwelling urinary catheter and oral medication as described. The catheter was replaced two times by the referring veterinarian and finally removed after 10 days. Thereafter, voluntary urination was seen. During the 2 months after the road traffic accident, slow recovery of motor function was seen. The right thoracic limb recovery progressed more slowly than the left limb, also showing some lower motor neuron signs during follow-up. This was judged to be consistent with a right-sided brachial plexus injury. The dog was reported ambulatory with mild residual ataxia and residual monoparesis of the right thoracic limb at the last follow-up 3 months post-injury. This case report highlights the MRI-based diagnosis of traumatic hemorrhagic myelopathy in a dog. A fair short-term outcome was achieved with conservative treatment in this case.

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Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2023.1260719