Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Episodic head tremors in dogs and brain MRI findings
By Liatis, Theofanis et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2023·Department of Clinical Science and Services, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Idiopathic and structural episodic nonintentional head tremor in dogs: 100 cases (2004-2022).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 7-year-old mixed-breed dog was brought in for nonintentional head tremors that occurred episodically. After an MRI, the vet found structural issues in the dog's brain, including a pituitary mass, which is a common cause of these tremors. While some dogs with idiopathic head tremors (without a known cause) showed improvement over time without treatment, those with structural issues often had additional neurological signs and a poorer prognosis. In this case, the dog with structural head tremors improved after treatment for meningoencephalitis, a brain infection.
People also search for: dog head tremors causes · pituitary mass in dogs · treatment for dog head tremors
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although idiopathic episodic head tremor (IEHT) in dogs is well-known, little is known about structural brain lesions causing structural episodic head tremor (SEHT). HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: Describe semiology, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings and outcome of dogs with IEHT or SEHT. We hypothesized that structural lesions affecting the middle cranial fossa or mesencephalic aqueduct could lead to SEHT. ANIMALS: One hundred dogs with IEHT (n = 71) or SEHT (n = 29). METHODS: Retrospective, multicenter, study of dogs with episodic (nonintentional) head tremor and brain MRI between 2004 and 2022. RESULTS: Lesions on MRI in SEHT dogs were localized to the middle cranial fossa (15/29), cerebrocortex (3/29), brainstem (2/29), fourth ventricle (1/29) or multifocal (8/29) with thalamus involvement (6/8). Secondary compression of the mesencephalic aqueduct (19/29), third ventricle or interthalamic adhesion or both (14/29) was common. The most common underlying condition in dogs with SEHT was a pituitary mass. Dogs with SEHT were older, had additional neurological signs and were more likely to be euthanized after diagnosis (P < .001 for all) compared to IEHT dogs. Two SEHT dogs had only tremor. In IEHT dogs, 8/10 owners reported that the tremor decreased or abated over time (range, 106-2315 days) without treatment. Tremor remission occurred in SEHT dogs treated for underlying meningoencephalitis. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Presence of additional neurological signs and older age may indicate an underlying structural cause for episodic (nonintentional) head tremor involving the mesencephalic aqueduct, third ventricle, interthalamic adhesion or some combination of these. An intracranial structural abnormality cannot be excluded in dogs with normal neurological examination.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37850712/