Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Spinal cord blood flow during disk surgery in chondrodystrophic dogs
By Malik, Yasminda et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2009·Department Clinical Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Laser-Doppler measurements of spinal cord blood flow changes during hemilaminectomy in chondrodystrophic dogs with disk extrusion.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of chondrodystrophic dogs (like Dachshunds) with back problems due to disk extrusion underwent surgery to relieve pressure on their spinal cords. During the surgery, researchers measured blood flow in the spinal cord and found that it increased right after the decompression procedure and remained elevated after 15 minutes. However, this increase in blood flow did not seem to affect the dogs' recovery or neurological status 24 hours later. The findings suggest that while blood flow improves after surgery, it doesn't necessarily correlate with better outcomes in the short term.
People also search for: dog back surgery recovery · disk extrusion in Dachshunds · spinal cord decompression surgery for dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: (1) To assess spinal cord blood flow (SCBF) during surgical treatment of disk extrusion in dogs and (2) to investigate associations between SCBF, clinical signs, presurgical MRI images, and 24-hour surgical outcome. STUDY DESIGN: Cohort study. ANIMALS: Chondrodystrophic dogs with thoracolumbar disk extrusion (n=12). METHODS: Diagnosis was based on clinical signs and MRI findings, and confirmed at surgery. Regional SCBF was measured intraoperatively by laser-Doppler flowmetry before, immediately after surgical spinal cord decompression, and after 15 minutes of lavaging the lesion. Care was taken to ensure a standardized surgical procedure to minimize factors that could influence measurement readings. RESULTS: A significant increase in intraoperative SCBF was found in all dogs (Wilcoxon's signed-rank test; P=.05) immediately after spinal cord decompression and after 15 minutes. Changes in SCBF were not associated with duration of clinical signs; initial or 24-hour neurologic status; or degree of spinal cord compression assessed by MRI. CONCLUSION: SCBF increases immediately after spinal cord decompression in dogs with disk herniation; however, increased SCBF was not associated with a diminished 24-hour neurologic status. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: An increase in SCBF does not appear to be either associated with the degree of spinal cord compression or of a magnitude sufficient to outweigh the benefit of surgical decompression by resulting in clinically relevant changes in 24-hour outcome.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19538666/