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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Minimally invasive brain biopsy and catheter placement in dogs

By Packer, Rebecca A et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2011·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of minimally invasive excisional brain biopsy and intracranial brachytherapy catheter placement in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of five healthy female dogs underwent a minimally invasive brain biopsy procedure to help diagnose brain tumors. The dogs had a small incision made in their skin, and a special device was used to remove tissue samples from the brain. While four of the dogs recovered well and were able to walk the next day, one dog unfortunately died due to complications from the procedure. The surviving dogs showed some temporary neurological issues, but their conditions improved over time. This technique may be useful for treating deep brain tumors in dogs while minimizing recovery time.

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate a technique for minimally invasive excisional brain biopsy and intracranial brachytherapy catheter placement in dogs. ANIMALS: 5 healthy adult female dogs. PROCEDURES: Computed tomographic guidance was used to plan a biopsy trajectory to a selected area of brain with reference to a localizer grid. The procedure was performed through a 1-cm skin incision and 6-mm burr hole by use of a 9-gauge biopsy device. Five cylindrical samples (3 to 4 mm in diameter and 7 to 12 mm in length) were removed over 5 cycles of the vacuum-assisted tissue excision system, leaving approximately a 2-cm³ resection cavity. A balloon-tipped intracranial brachytherapy catheter was placed through the burr hole into the resection cavity, expanded with saline (0.9% NaCl) solution, and explanted 7 days later. RESULTS: 4 of 5 dogs survived the procedure. The fifth died because of iatrogenic brain damage. Neurologic deficits were unilateral and focal. Twenty-four hours after surgery, all surviving dogs were ambulatory, 2 dogs exhibited ipsiversive circling, 4 had contralateral proprioceptive deficits, 3 had contralateral menace response deficits, 2 had a reduced contralateral response to noxious nasal stimulation, and 1 had dull mentation with intermittent horizontal nystagmus and ventrolateral strabismus. Neurologic status improved throughout the study period. Histologic quality of biopsy specimens was excellent. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This technique enabled histologic diagnosis from high-quality biopsy specimens obtained through a minimally invasive technique and has potential applications for multimodal treatment of deep brain tumors in dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21194343/