Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Left hind leg lameness in bull diagnosed with spine disk disease
By Caldwell, Marc et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2017·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Diagnosis of lumbosacral diskospondylosis in a bucking bull assisted by high-definition thermal and nuclear scintigraphic imaging.
- Species:
- cattle
Plain-English summary
An 8-year-old Brahman-cross bull was brought in for left hind limb lameness that started after a rodeo performance where he landed awkwardly. The vet found signs of muscle atrophy and used advanced imaging techniques to identify a problem in the spine that was pressing on nerves. To treat the issue, the bull received an epidural injection of a steroid and a series of joint injections. Within a week, the bull's lameness and coordination problems improved, allowing him to return to work for breeding.
People also search for: bull lameness treatment · Brahman bull back injury · epidural steroid injection for animals
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION An 8-year-old Brahman-cross bull was evaluated for left hind limb lameness of 2 months' duration. The lameness was first noticed during a rodeo bucking performance, immediately after the bull appeared to land inappropriately on the affected limb. CLINICAL FINDINGS Physical examination findings revealed left hind limb lameness, ataxia, and left-sided epaxial muscle atrophy. Palpation per rectum along the lumbar portion of the vertebral column revealed evidence of exostosis of the ventral aspect. High-definition infrared thermal imaging revealed a pattern of reduced skin temperature in the area of the left lumbar and gluteal regions suggestive of a disruption in the sympathetic control of peripheral blood flow. Nuclear scintigraphy revealed a focal area of increased radioisotope uptake on the left ventrolateral aspect of the L2-3 intervertebral joint. A presumptive diagnosis of ventrolateral vertebral spondylosis resulting in spinal nerve impingement was made. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME 200 mg of methylprednisolone was epidurally injected at the site of the lesion, and treatment with polysulfated glycosaminoglycans was initiated (500 mg, IM, every 4 days for 7 treatments, then monthly thereafter). The lameness and ataxia observed in the left hind limb resolved within 1 week after treatment began. Subsequently, the bull was discharged from the hospital and was used successfully for semen collection and live-cover breeding. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Use of thermography for the bull of this report provided additional insight into neurovascular physiologic function that classical imaging modalities are unable to provide and, when combined with nuclear scintigraphy, aided in identifying the most critical lesion in a complex clinical case.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28207315/