Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with neck spinal cord compression treated by fusion cage surgery
By Adrega da Silva, C et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative orthopaedics and traumatology : V.C.O.T·2010·Small Animal Referral Clinic, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Caudal cervical arthrodesis using a distractable fusion cage in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 7-year-old male Dobermann Pinscher was brought in for worsening coordination and weakness in all four legs over two weeks. After tests showed a problem in his neck causing spinal cord compression, the vet performed surgery to stabilize the affected area using a special fusion cage. Thankfully, the dog showed no worsening of his condition after surgery, and within eight weeks, he was walking normally again. Follow-up scans revealed that the surgery was successful, with no complications or return of symptoms over the next 40 months.
People also search for: dog neck surgery recovery · Dobermann Pinscher ataxia treatment · cervical fusion cage for dogs
Abstract
This case report describes a cervical fusion cage, surgical technique and the long-term outcome of caudal cervical arthrodesis used to stabilise dynamic spinal cord compression at the sixth and seventh cervical intervertebral disc space (C6, C7) in a dog. A seven-year-old, 41 kg, entire male Dobermann Pinscher was admitted for progressive ataxia of two weeks duration. Neurological examination revealed ambulatory tetraparesis. Computed tomographic myelogram scans in neutral and traction positions of the neck were performed and were used to determine presence of a dynamic component. A C6-C7 surgical distraction and stabilisation using a distractable intervertebral fusion cage was performed. There was not any deterioration of neurological status was observed on postoperative neurological evaluation. Within eight weeks after surgery, gait and postural abilities had returned to normal. Computed tomography evaluation indicated a complete bridging callus within and outside the cage at 15 weeks after surgery. There were not any complications or recurrences of initial neurological deficits observed during the 40 month follow-up period. Based on the follow-up period data, a C6-C7 dynamic spinal cord compression with disc protrusion was successfully treated by a distractable cervical fusion cage.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20485861/