Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
MRI differences in neck spines of Great Danes with cervical
By Martin-Vaquero, Paula & da Costa, Ronaldo C·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2014·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Magnetic resonance imaging features of Great Danes with and without clinical signs of cervical spondylomyelopathy.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 30 Great Danes, half with cervical spondylomyelopathy (CSM) and half without symptoms, underwent MRI to examine their neck vertebrae. The dogs with CSM showed significant spinal cord compression and more severe foraminal stenosis (narrowing of the openings where nerves exit the spine) compared to the normal dogs. Interestingly, some normal dogs also had abnormalities, but they were less severe. This study highlights the importance of MRI in diagnosing CSM, as it can reveal issues that might not yet show clinical signs.
People also search for: Great Dane neck problems · cervical spondylomyelopathy symptoms · MRI for dog spinal issues
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To characterize and compare the MRI morphological features of the cervical vertebral column of Great Danes with and without clinical signs of cervical spondylomyelopathy (CSM). DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. ANIMALS: 30 Great Danes (15 clinically normal and 15 CSM-affected). PROCEDURES: All dogs underwent MRI of the cervical vertebral column (C2-3 through T1-2). Features evaluated included sites of subarachnoid space compression, spinal cord compression, or both; degree, cause, and direction of compression; MRI signal changes of the spinal cord; articular process (facet) joint characteristics; internal vertebral venous plexus visibility; and presence of extradural synovial cysts as well as presence and degree of intervertebral disk degeneration and foraminal stenosis. RESULTS: Clinically normal and CSM-affected dogs had 11 and 61 compressive sites, respectively, detected with MRI. All CSM-affected dogs had ≥ 1 site of spinal cord compression. No signal changes were observed in spinal cords of normal dogs, whereas 14 sites of hyperintensity were found in 9 CSM-affected dogs. Foraminal stenosis was present in 11 clinically normal and all CSM-affected dogs. The number of stenotic foraminal sites was significantly greater in the CSM-affected group, and severe stenosis appeared to be more common in this group than in the clinically normal group. Significant differences were identified between clinically normal and CSM-affected dogs with regard to amount of synovial fluid evident, regularity of articular surfaces, degree of articular process joint proliferation, and internal vertebral venous plexus visibility. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Abnormalities were detected with MRI in several clinically normal Great Danes. Severe spinal cord compression, number of stenotic foraminal sites, and signal changes within the spinal cord distinguished CSM-affected from clinically normal Great Danes.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25075822/