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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Spinal cord blood clots in 6 dogs treated with surgery

By Hague, D W et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2015·Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical, magnetic resonance imaging, and histopathologic findings in 6 dogs with surgically resected extraparenchymal spinal cord hematomas.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of six dogs experienced sudden neurological issues due to spontaneous spinal cord hematomas, which are blood collections outside the spinal cord. They showed no signs of underlying problems, and MRI scans revealed normal spinal cord tissue. All dogs underwent surgery to relieve pressure from the hematomas, and most (five out of six) regained normal or nearly normal function afterward. Long-term follow-up showed no worsening of their symptoms. This suggests that with proper surgical treatment, dogs with this condition can have a good recovery.

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Extraparenchymal spinal cord hematoma has been described in veterinary medicine in association with neoplasia, intervertebral disk disease, and snake envenomation. There are rare reports of spontaneous extraparenchymal spinal cord hematoma formation with no known cause in human medicine. Multiple cases of spontaneous extraparenchymal spinal cord hematoma have not been described previously in veterinary medicine. OBJECTIVES: To describe the signalment, clinical findings, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features, and surgical outcomes in histopathologically confirmed extraparenchymal spinal cord hematomas in dogs with no identified underlying etiology. ANIMALS: Six dogs had MRI of the spinal cord, decompressive spinal surgery, and histopathologic confirmation of extraparenchymal spinal cord hematoma not associated with an underlying cause. METHODS: Multi-institutional retrospective study. RESULTS: Six patients had spontaneous extraparenchymal spinal cord hematoma formation. MRI showed normal signal within the spinal cord parenchyma in all patients. All hematomas had T2-weighted hyperintensity and the majority (5/6) had no contrast enhancement. All dogs underwent surgical decompression and most patients (5/6) returned to normal or near normal neurologic function postoperatively. Follow-up of the patients (ranging between 921 and 1,446 days) showed no progression of neurologic clinical signs or any conditions associated with increased bleeding tendency. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Before surgery and histopathology confirming extraparenchymal hematoma, the primary differential in most cases was neoplasia, based on the MRI findings. This retrospective study reminds clinicians of the importance of the combination of advanced imaging combined with histopathologic diagnosis. The prognosis for spontaneous spinal cord extraparenchymal hematoma with surgical decompression appears to be favorable in most cases.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25619517/