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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Albuminocytological dissociation in dog spinal fluid

By Suñol, Anna et al.·Published in The Veterinary record·2021·Hospital for Small Animals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cerebrospinal fluid analysis in dogs: Main patterns and prevalence of albuminocytological dissociation.

Species:
dog
Brain & nervesDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with various neurological issues underwent testing of their cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to check for a condition called albuminocytological dissociation (ACD), which indicates a problem with the blood-brain barrier. Out of 497 dogs, 16.5% showed signs of ACD, with the highest rates found in dogs with cranial nerve neuropathy, brain tumors, idiopathic vestibular disease (a balance disorder), and brain vascular disease. Understanding these patterns can help veterinarians diagnose and treat neurological conditions more effectively.

People also search for: dog neurological symptoms · dog cerebrospinal fluid analysis · dog brain tumor signs · idiopathic vestibular disease treatment

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Albuminocytological dissociation (ACD) of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is defined as an increased total protein concentration with normal total nucleated cell count. It is suspected to occur in diseases that alter the blood-brain barrier, increase the production of protein or obstruct the flow of CSF. The purposes of this study were to review the CSF analysis results of a large cohort of dogs with neurological conditions, to analyse the total prevalence of ACD and to describe which diseases have a higher prevalence of ACD. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Medical records were retrospectively searched for dogs whom CSF was sampled from 2012-2019. Data collected included signalment, body weight, site of collection of the CSF, CSF analysis results, and final diagnosis. RESULTS: A total of 497 dogs met the inclusion criteria. ACD was identified in 16.5% (82/497) of dogs. The diseases with higher proportion of ACD were cranial nerve neuropathy (6/10; 60.0%), brain tumour (10/24; 41.7%), idiopathic vestibular disease (7/17; 41.2%) and brain vascular disease (4/13; 30.8%). CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: This study describes the CSF patterns of the most common neurological conditions in dogs, also characterizing, for the first time in dogs, the prevalence and causes of ACD, which was identified in 16.5% of the samples. The diseases with highest proportions of ACD were cranial nerve neuropathy, brain tumour, idiopathic vestibular disease and brain vascular disease.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33666999/