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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Neutrophil activation in dogs after spinal cord injury from disk

By Van Sandt, Rae L et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2022·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Circulating neutrophil activation in dogs with naturally occurring spinal cord injury secondary to intervertebral disk herniation.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old Dachshund was brought in for weakness in the back legs due to a spinal cord injury from a herniated disk. After undergoing decompressive surgery, the dog's blood was tested several times to monitor the immune response. The results showed that certain immune cells were more active shortly after the injury and surgery, indicating a strong inflammatory response. While the dog showed signs of recovery, further studies are needed to understand the inflammation process in dogs with similar injuries.

People also search for: dog spinal cord injury treatment · Dachshund back leg weakness · intervertebral disk herniation in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the time course of circulating neutrophil priming and activity in dogs with spinal cord injury secondary to intervertebral disk herniation that undergo decompressive surgery. ANIMALS: 9 dogs with spinal cord injury and 9 healthy dogs (controls). PROCEDURES: For dogs with spinal cord injury, blood samples were collected on the day of hospital admission and 3, 7, 30, and 90 days after injury and decompressive surgery. A single blood sample was collected from the control dogs. Flow cytometry analysis was performed on isolated neutrophils incubated with antibody against CD11b and nonfluorescent dihydrorhodamine 123, which was converted to fluorescent rhodamine 123 to measure oxidative burst activity. RESULTS: Expression of CD11b was increased in dogs with spinal cord injury 3 days after injury and decompressive surgery, relative to day 7 expression. Neutrophils expressed high oxidative burst activity both 3 and 7 days after injury and decompressive surgery, compared with activity in healthy dogs. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: For dogs with spinal cord injury, high CD11b expression 3 days after injury and decompressive surgery was consistent with findings for rodents with experimentally induced spinal cord injury. However, the high oxidative burst activity 3 and 7 days after injury and decompressive surgery was not consistent with data from other species, and additional studies on inflammatory events in dogs with naturally occurring spinal cord injury are needed.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35066481/