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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

MRI can confirm progressive myelomalacia in dogs with clear signs

By Cordle, Katelyn J et al.·Published in Veterinary radiology & ultrasound : the official journal of the American College of Veterinary Radiology and the International Veterinary Radiology Association·2023·Department of Molecular Biomedical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: MRI features can help to confirm a diagnosis of progressive myelomalacia, but may not be accurate in dogs lacking characteristic clinical signs at the time of imaging.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old Dachshund was brought in for weakness in the back legs after a back injury. The veterinarian suspected progressive myelomalacia (PMM), a serious condition that can develop after a spinal disc injury. An MRI was performed, showing specific changes in the spinal cord that supported the diagnosis of PMM. However, the MRI results were not always reliable for dogs that hadn’t yet shown clear symptoms of PMM. Unfortunately, the Dachshund's condition progressed, highlighting the need for careful monitoring after such injuries.

People also search for: dog back leg weakness · Dachshund spinal injury · progressive myelomalacia diagnosis · MRI for dog back problems

Abstract

Progressive myelomalacia (PMM) is a fatal sequela of acute thoracolumbar intervertebral disc extrusion in dogs, with unpredictable onset in the days after the inciting injury. No single reliable diagnostic test is currently available. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features such as T2-weighted spinal cord hyperintensity and loss of subarachnoid signal in a half-Fourier single-shot turbo spin echo (HASTE) sequence have been associated with PMM, but are sometimes present in other dogs with severe deficits. Magnetic resonance imaging findings in 22 dogs with a clinical or histopathologic diagnosis of PMM and 38 deep pain-negative paraplegic dogs were compared in a retrospective case-control study. Length of T2-weighted hyperintense spinal cord change and HASTE signal loss were significantly associated with clinically evident PMM (P = .0019 and P = .0085), however, there were no significant differences between groups when analysis was restricted to dogs not yet showing clinical signs of PMM. The PMM group also had significantly shorter compressive lesions than the control group (P = 0.026), suggesting a possible role of more severe focal pressure at the extrusion site. A segment of total loss of contrast enhancement in the venous sinuses and meninges, a feature not previously described, was more common in the PMM group and the difference approached significance (P = 0.054). Findings show that MRI features can support the diagnosis in dogs with clinical evidence of PMM, and absence of these features supports absence of PMM at time of imaging. However, their absence does not reliably differentiate dogs with imminent progressive myelomalacia from other dogs with severe deficits following intervertebral disc extrusion.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36660871/