Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Rib bone infection and air pockets in a dog with spleen problems
By Depoix, Marie et al.·Published in The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne·2026·Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Multifocal costal osseous pneumatosis and osteomyelitis secondary toin a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 3-year-old male German shepherd was brought to the vet after showing signs of lethargy and not eating for two days. Upon examination, he was very dehydrated, had a high temperature, and was in pain, leading the vet to suspect a serious issue with his spleen. Surgery revealed multiple health problems, including gas in his bones and signs of a severe infection. Despite some initial improvement, the dog's condition worsened over the following month, and he was ultimately euthanized. A necropsy showed he had lymphoma, a type of cancer.
People also search for: dog lethargy and not eating · German shepherd cancer symptoms · splenic torsion treatment in dogs
Abstract
A 3-year-old castrated male German shepherd dog was presented with a 48-hour history of lethargy and anorexia. On presentation, the dog was laterally recumbent, hyperthermic, tachycardic, severely dehydrated, and exhibiting abdominal pain. Abdominal radiographs raised suspicion for splenic torsion. An exploratory laparotomy revealed a suspected splenic vein thrombosis, prompting a splenectomy and an incisional gastropexy. Computed tomography revealed multifocal osseous pneumatosis, rib abscesses, costochondral luxation, renal infarcts, suspected intramuscular thrombosis, aspiration pneumonia, and lymphadenopathy. Despite negative blood culture and peri-costal abscess cultures,was isolated from bone marrow obtainedcostochondral rib aspiration. During hospitalization, persistent non-regenerative anemia and thrombocytopenia were observed; the dog was also nonambulatory tetraparetic, worse on the right, indicating a predominantly right-sided myelopathy. After some improvement, the dog was discharged from the hospital; however, his condition progressively worsened despite treatment, leading to humane euthanasia 1 mo later. Necropsy revealed disseminated round cell tumor consistent with lymphoma. Key clinical message: Visceral organ gas accumulation or intraosseous gas in the absence of previous trauma or surgery should prompt suspicion for an anaerobic infection. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first reported case of rib pneumatosis secondary to disseminatedin a dog.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41847488/