Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with spinal pain and unsteady back legs diagnosed with epidural
By M. Hoffmann et al.·Published in Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica·2013·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: Epidural myelolipoma in a Husky-cross: a case report
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
An 11.5-year-old male Husky-cross was brought to the vet because he was experiencing increasing sensitivity along his back and some trouble with coordination in his back legs. An MRI revealed a mass near his spine, which turned out to be an epidural myelolipoma, a type of tumor. Unfortunately, the dog was euthanized due to the severity of his condition. At the time of the necropsy, the mass was found to be about 2.5 cm in size.
People also search for: dog back pain · Husky-cross coordination problems · epidural myelolipoma in dogs · dog spinal tumor symptoms
Abstract
Epidural spinal myelolipoma was diagnosed in an 11.5-year-old castrated male Husky-cross that was evaluated at the veterinary teaching hospital due to progressive thoracolumbar spinal hyperaesthesia and mild proprioceptive pelvic limb ataxia. A focal, ill-defined mildly inhomogenous extradural mass lesion was detected by MRI. The dog was euthanized. At necropsy an extradurally located reddish mass of about 2.5 cm in diameter was present in the vertebral canal. The mass was identified histopathologically as an epidural myelolipoma.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/23557489