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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with severe neck pain has abnormal spinal fluid test

By Bauer, Natali B et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2006·Veterinary Pathology Department·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cerebrospinal fluid from a 6-year-old dog with severe neck pain.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 6-year-old female Labrador Retriever/Terrier mix was brought to the vet with severe neck pain and intermittent fever that lasted for three weeks. Despite various treatments, her condition did not improve, and tests of her cerebrospinal fluid showed unusual material that might indicate damage to nerve cells. Unfortunately, the dog was euthanized, and a postmortem exam revealed a problem with her neck discs. This case highlights the complexity of spinal issues in dogs and the challenges in diagnosing them.

People also search for: dog neck pain treatment · Labrador Retriever neck problems · dog cervical disc disease symptoms

Abstract

A 6-year-old, intact female, Labrador Retriever/Terrier cross was presented to the University Veterinary Hospital, University College Dublin with a 3-week history of therapy-resistant cervical pain and intermittent fever. Physical examination findings included marked cervical pain resulting in neck extension and vocalization. Examination of the CSF revealed mild pleocytosis (total nucleated cells = 0.009 x 10(9)/L, reference interval <0.005 x 10(9)/L). Cytocentrifuged preparations of the CSF were of low cellularity, containing predominantly macrophages and occasional small lymphocytes. Several small- to medium-sized fragments of a slightly granular, amorphous, eosinophilic substance were observed. The majority of mononuclear cells were located within this material, in small groups of 3-13 cells. The amorphous foamy material stained positive with Luxol fast blue, suggestive of myelin-like material. The dog was euthanized and postmortem examination revealed intervertebral disk protrusion between C2 and C3. Hematoxylin- and Luxol fast blue-stained histopathologic sections of brain and spinal cord revealed only mild hemorrhage. The extracellular material in the CSF of this dog may have been caused by myelin degeneration or leakage of phospholipids from damaged cells. Because no histologic evidence of demyelination was observed with the disk extrusion, the myelin-like material in this case was thought to be the product of phospholipid breakdown from damaged cellular membranes. Three cases of dogs with spinal cord disease and myelin-like material in the CSF have been reported previously. The clinical significance of this finding is still unknown.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16511804/