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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with sudden weak left side and eye movement problem after neck

By Liatis, Theophanes et al.·Published in Topics in companion animal medicine·2020·Neurology & Neurosurgery Service, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Convergence-Retraction Nystagmus in a Dog With Presumptive Ischemic Encephalopathy Following Acute Cervicothoracic Myelopathy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 6.5-year-old neutered male Trailhound was brought in for sudden weakness on the left side of his body, making it hard for him to walk. After tests, including an MRI, the vet found a problem in his neck and a separate issue in his brain that suggested a type of stroke. The dog also developed unusual eye movements, which are linked to brain problems. He received physiotherapy to help with his recovery. At a follow-up a year later, he was back to normal, showing that he made a full recovery.

People also search for: dog weakness on one side · Trailhound eye problems · dog physiotherapy recovery · dog stroke symptoms · convergence-retraction nystagmus in dogs

Abstract

A 6.5-year-old male neutered Trailhound was admitted for hyperacute, nonprogressive, left-sided hemiparesis. Physical and neurologic examination revealed nonpainful, left-sided poorly ambulatory hemiparesis, decreased left-sided postural reactions and thoracic limbs hyporeflexia. Neuroanatomic localisation was consistent with a left-sided C6-T2 myelopathy. Haematology and biochemistry revealed nonspecific abnormalities. Magnetic resonance imaging of the neck revealed a focal intramedullary lesion at the level of C6-C7 vertebrae compatible with acute hydrated noncompressive nucleus pulposus extrusion or ischemic myelopathy. During the second day of hospitalization, the dog developed convergence-retraction nystagmus, up-gaze palsy and eyelid retraction (Collier's sign) compatible with dorsal midbrain syndrome. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain revealed a focal lesion compatible with dorsal midbrain ischemic infarct. Further clinicopathologic testing, thoracic and abdominal imaging were unremarkable. Ischemic encephalopathy of unknown etiology was additionally diagnosed. Physiotherapy was performed therapeutically. At 1-year follow-up the dog was normal. This is an unusual report of a dog with myelopathy followed by ischemic encephalopathy with manifestation of convergence-retraction nystagmus in the absence of vestibular signs. This saccadic intrusion is a characteristic clinical manifestation of a dorsal midbrain syndrome localization. The importance of a complete differential diagnoses list formation in a dog with ischemic encephalopathy which leads to a thorough diagnostic investigation plan is highlighted. Moreover, this report contributes to the enrichment of the clinical reasoning veterinary literature on convergence-retraction nystagmus. To the authors' knowledge, this is the second case report (fourth dog) to describe convergence-retraction nystagmus in dogs as a manifestation of dorsal midbrain syndrome.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32115081/