Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with brain fluid loss after tumor surgery seen on MRI
By Cloquell, Ana et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2021·Small Animal Hospital, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Magnetic resonance imaging findings and clinical management of suspected intracranial hypovolemia after transfrontal craniotomy in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
An 8-year-old border collie showed signs of neurological problems after surgery to remove a brain tumor. Although the surgery went well with no immediate complications, the dog experienced a decline in neurological function afterward. An MRI suggested that the dog was suffering from intracranial hypovolemia, a condition where there is low fluid volume in the brain. The veterinarian treated the dog with bed rest, gabapentin, intravenous theophylline, steroids, antiepileptic drugs, and antibiotics. After 15 days of treatment, the dog improved and was able to walk again, although it still had some balance issues.
People also search for: dog neurological problems after surgery · border collie brain tumor recovery · treatment for intracranial hypovolemia in dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To report the diagnosis and clinical management of a case of suspected intracranial hypovolemia (IH) in a dog after resection of a large fronto-olfactory chordoid meningioma. STUDY DESIGN: Clinical case report. ANIMAL: One 8-year-old border collie with forebrain neurological signs caused by a fronto-olfactory extra-axial mass diagnosed by using MRI. METHODS: The dog underwent bilateral transfrontal craniotomy for excision of the mass by using ultrasonic aspiration. Immediate postsurgical MRI revealed complete gross resection with no evidence of early-onset complications such as edema, hemorrhage, mass effect, or pneumoencephalus. However, diffuse symmetric meningeal thickening and contrast enhancement were noted. No complications were noted during surgery or while under anesthesia. RESULTS: Neurological deterioration was observed postoperatively. No abnormalities were detected systemically. Thus, early MRI-confirmed findings and neurological deterioration were suspected to be caused by IH. Conservative treatment consisting of bed rest, gabapentin, and intravenous theophylline was then initiated in addition to steroids, antiepileptic drugs, and antibiotics. A gradual neurological improvement was observed, and the dog was discharged completely ambulatory with moderate proprioceptive ataxia 15 days after surgery. CONCLUSION: The clinical and MRI-confirmed findings reported here are consistent with IH, a well-described syndrome in man. This is the first report of a dog with MRI-confirmed findings consistent with IH describing subsequent response to medical management. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Intracranial hypovolemia after craniotomy should be considered when there is neurological deterioration and characteristic MRI-confirmed findings.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33609047/