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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Miniature Dachshunds with spinal cord compression from epidural

By Aikawa, Takeshi et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2008·Aikawa Veterinary Medical Center, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Epidural idiopathic sterile pyogranulomatous inflammation causing spinal cord compressive injury in five Miniature Dachshunds.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Five Miniature Dachshunds were brought in for weakness in their back legs, which is known as paraparesis or paraplegia. After thorough testing, including myelography (a type of imaging), the vets found that inflammation in the epidural fat was pressing on their spinal cords. The dogs underwent surgery to relieve the pressure, and all of them showed good recovery over the following months. This condition, called idiopathic sterile pyogranulomatous inflammation, can affect these dogs and may require surgical treatment for a positive outcome.

People also search for: Miniature Dachshund back leg weakness · dog spinal cord surgery recovery · paraparesis treatment in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To characterize the clinical signs, diagnostic and surgical findings, and outcome of dogs with idiopathic sterile pyogranulomatous inflammation (ISP) of epidural fat causing spinal cord compression. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective study. ANIMALS: Dogs (n=5). METHODS: Dogs with epidural ISP (2002-2006) were identified retrospectively. Inclusion criteria were neurologic examination, myelography, and definitive diagnosis of ISP confirmed by surgery and histopathologic examination of epidural spinal cord compressive tissue. RESULTS: The most common clinical sign was paraparesis/paraplegia. No abnormalities were detected by laboratory testing or survey spine radiographs. On myelography, extradural spinal cord compressions were focal (dogs 1, 3, and 5) or multifocal (dogs 2 and 4). Surgical decompression of the spinal cord was completed by hemilaminectomy. Epidural fat collected surgically had pyogranulomatous inflammation of unknown cause and was histologically similar to subcutaneous ISP. All dogs had good long-term neurologic outcome (10-45 months follow-up). Some dogs had episodes of ISP at other sites before or after surgical treatment of epidural ISP, suggesting there may be a systemic form of ISP. CONCLUSION: Epidural ISP may cause a spinal cord compressive lesion in Miniature Dachshunds, which can be treated by surgical decompression of the spinal cord with or without administration of adjunctive steroids. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Epidural ISP should be considered as a possible cause of thoracolumbar myelopathy for Miniature Dachshunds.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19134111/