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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Signs and MRI features of spinal cord squeezing in pugs

By Lourinho, Filipa et al.·Published in Veterinary radiology & ultrasound : the official journal of the American College of Veterinary Radiology and the International Veterinary Radiology Association·2020·Southern Counties Veterinary Specialists, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical features and MRI characteristics of presumptive constrictive myelopathy in 27 pugs.

Plain-English summary

A group of 27 pugs with weak back legs and difficulty walking were diagnosed with a condition called constrictive myelopathy, which causes spinal cord compression. Many of these pugs also had issues with incontinence. MRI scans showed specific changes in their spinal cords, including irregularities and lesions that suggested the condition might be linked to a bone issue in their spine. The findings could help veterinarians diagnose this condition more accurately and consider treatments like stabilizing the spine to improve the dogs' mobility and quality of life.

People also search for: pug back leg weakness · pug incontinence treatment · constrictive myelopathy in dogs · MRI for dog spinal problems · pug spinal cord compression symptoms

Abstract

Constrictive myelopathy has been described in pugs with paraparesis and is characterized by fibrous connective and granulation tissue within the dura mater causing spinal cord compression and focal gliosis. An association between constrictive myelopathy and caudal articular process (CAP) dysplasia is suspected; however, some studies have reported CAP dysplasia as an incidental finding. The imaging appearance of constrictive myelopathy is currently limited to a small number of cases. The aim of this multicenter, retrospective, descriptive study was to detail the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) characteristics and to correlate these with clinical signs of presumptive constrictive myelopathy in pugs. Medical databases from five veterinary referral hospitals were reviewed to identify pugs with pelvic limb ataxia and paresis, that had a complete record of signalment, neurological examination, and MRI of the thoracolumbar spinal cord. The exclusion criteria were pugs with other conditions, such as unequivocal subarachnoid diverticula, hemivertebrae causing vertebral canal stenosis, intervertebral disc extrusions/protrusions, and multifocal/diffuse lesions. Twenty-seven pugs met the inclusion criteria. All cases were ambulatory with paraparesis and ataxia. Nearly 60% were incontinent. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a focal myelopathy in all cases showing one or more of the following lesions: CAP dysplasia (25/27), focal subarachnoid space irregular margination (26/27) with circumferential or dorsal contrast enhancement (10/12), and a symmetric V-shaped ventral extradural lesion (23/27). This study describes specific MRI features of pugs with presumptive constrictive myelopathy, which authors hypothesize to be a consequence of chronic micro-motion. Our results may help in diagnosing and subsequently treating this condition, which may warrant vertebral stabilization.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32583954/