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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Signs and nerve problems in dogs with aortic blood clots

By Gonçalves, R et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2008·Institute of Comparative Medicine, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical and neurological characteristics of aortic thromboembolism in dogs.

Species:
dog
Brain & nervesDogs

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old male Cavalier King Charles Spaniel was brought in for sudden weakness in his back legs and difficulty walking. The vet diagnosed him with aortic thromboembolism, a condition where a blood clot blocks blood flow, causing serious issues. This dog had a severe case with noticeable neurological deficits, which can happen quickly. Treatment options may include medications to manage symptoms and improve blood flow, but the prognosis can vary based on how quickly the condition is addressed.

People also search for: dog sudden weakness back legs · Cavalier King Charles Spaniel exercise intolerance · aortic thromboembolism treatment in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To characterise the clinical presentation and neurological abnormalities in dogs affected by aortic thromboembolism. METHODS: The medical records of 13 dogs diagnosed with aortic thromboembolism as the cause of the clinical signs, and where a complete neurological examination was performed, were reviewed retrospectively. RESULTS: The onset was acute in only four dogs, chronic in five dogs (with all of these presenting as exercise intolerance) or chronic with acute deterioration in four dogs. Dogs with an acute onset of clinical signs were more severely affected exhibiting neurological deficits, while dogs with a chronic onset of disease predominantly presented with the exercise intolerance and minimal deficits. The locomotor deficits included exercise intolerance with pelvic limb weakness (five of 13), pelvic limb ataxia (one of 13), monoparesis (two of 13), paraparesis (two of 13), non-ambulatory paraparesis (two of 13) and paraplegia (one of 13). There was an apparent male predisposition and the cavalier King charles spaniel was overrepresented. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The rate of onset of clinical signs appears to segregate dogs affected by aortic thromboembolism into two groups, with different clinical characteristics and outcomes. Dogs with an acute onset of the clinical signs tend to be more severely affected, while dogs with a chronic onset predominantly present with exercise intolerance. It is therefore important to consider aortic thromboembolism as a differential diagnosis in dogs with an acute onset of pelvic limb neurological deficits and in dogs with longer standing exercise intolerance.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18339088/