Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with repeated balance episodes linked to high blood pressure
By Bentley, R Timothy & March, Philip A·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2011·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Recurrent vestibular paroxysms associated with systemic hypertension in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 9-year-old Australian Shepherd was brought in for frequent episodes of unsteady walking and other neurologic signs that happened more often during exercise. After thorough testing, the vet found that the dog had high blood pressure, which was diagnosed as systemic hypertension. The dog was treated with medications to lower the blood pressure, and this helped eliminate the neurologic episodes. When the symptoms returned, the vet adjusted the medication dosage, leading to better control of the blood pressure and only a few more episodes over the next 30 months.
People also search for: dog ataxia treatment · Australian Shepherd high blood pressure · dog neurologic signs exercise
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION: A 9-year-old 19.7-kg (43.3-lb) spayed female Australian Shepherd was examined for an increase in frequency of episodic neurologic signs, often occurring upon exercise. CLINICAL FINDINGS: Between episodes of neurologic signs, the dog was considered clinically normal on the basis of findings on physical and neurologic examinations. An episode of ataxia with central vestibular signs was induced by exercising the patient in the hospital. All clinicopathologic values were within reference ranges, as were findings on magnetic resonance imaging of the brain and peripheral vestibular system. Systolic blood pressures of 180 to 200 mm Hg were recorded, and systemic hypertension was diagnosed. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: While the dog received amlodipine and enalapril, blood pressure returned to within reference range, and episodes of neurologic signs no longer occurred. When clinical signs later recurred, systolic blood pressure was again found to be high. Following an increase in medication dosage, blood pressure normalized, and only 4 further episodes of neurologic signs were observed during a follow-up period totaling 30 months. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Transient ischemic attack is a common diagnosis in humans but has not been described for dogs. In humans, it is defined as focal brain dysfunction caused by vascular disease that resolves completely in less than 24 hours and is often recurrent. Systemic hypertension is one of the most common preexisting conditions. We propose that the dog in the present report had clinical signs and diagnostic test results supportive of a diagnosis of transient ischemic attack.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21879966/