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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

MRI findings in Pugs with thoracolumbar spinal disease and joint

By Driver, Colin J et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2019·Fitzpatrick Referrals Ltd, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Magnetic resonance image findings in pug dogs with thoracolumbar myelopathy and concurrent caudal articular process dysplasia.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 18 Pug dogs, aged around 8.8 years, were brought in for worsening weakness in their back legs and some had issues with urinating or defecating. MRI scans showed problems in their spinal cords, often linked to a condition called caudal articular process dysplasia, which affects the joints in the spine. Most dogs had spinal cord compression due to intervertebral disc disease, while a few had other types of compression. Treatment details weren't specified, but the findings suggest that these spinal issues are common in Pugs with similar symptoms.

People also search for: Pug back leg weakness · Pug spinal cord problems · Pug incontinence treatment

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A retrospective case series study was undertaken to describe the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings in Pug dogs with thoracolumbar myelopathy and concurrent caudal articular process (CAP) dysplasia. Electronic clinical records were searched for Pug dogs who underwent MRI for the investigation of a T3-L3 spinal cord segment disease with subsequent confirmation of CAP dysplasia with computed tomography between January 2013 and June 2017. Clinical parameters age, gender, neuter status, body weight, urinary or faecal incontinence, severity and duration of clinical signs were recorded. MRI abnormalities were described. Univariable non-parametric tests investigated the association between the clinical parameters and evidence of extra- or intra-dural spinal cord compression on MRI. RESULTS: 18 Pug dogs were included. The median age was 106 months with median duration of clinical signs 5 months. All presented with variable severity of spastic paraparesis and ataxia; 50% suffered urinary/faecal incontinence. In all cases, MRI revealed a focal increase in T2-weighted signal intensity within the spinal cord at an intervertebral level where bilateral CAP dysplasia was present; this was bilateral aplasia in all but one case, which had one aplastic and one severely hypoplastic CAP. MRI lesions were associated with spinal cord compression in all but one case; intervertebral disc protrusion resulted in extra-dural compression in 10 (56%) cases; intra-dural compression was associated with a suspected arachnoid diverticulum in 4 (22%) cases and suspected pia-arachnoid fibrosis in 3 cases (17%). There was no association between clinical parameters and a diagnosis of intra-dural vs extra-dural compression. CAP dysplasia occurred at multiple levels in the T10-13 region with bilateral aplasia at T11-12 most often associated with corresponding spinal cord lesions on MRI. CONCLUSIONS: All Pugs dogs in this study were presented for chronic progressive ambulatory paraparesis; incontinence was commonly reported. Although intervertebral disc disease was the most common radiologic diagnosis, intra-dural compression associated with arachnoid diverticulae/fibrosis was also common. Bilateral CAP aplasia was present in all but one Pug dog at the level of MRI detectable spinal cord lesions. A causal relationship between CAP dysplasia and causes of thoracolumbar myelopathy is speculated but is not confirmed by this study.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31151444/