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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Post-surgery MRI spinal cord compression does not predict dog

By Auffret, Vincent et al.·Published in Veterinary radiology & ultrasound : the official journal of the American College of Veterinary Radiology and the International Veterinary Radiology Association·2024·Department of Clinical Sciences, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Residual volume of extruded disc material and residual spinal cord compression measured on postoperative MRI do not predict neurological outcomes in dogs following decompressive surgery for thoracolumbar intervertebral disc extrusion.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 17 dogs with back problems caused by intervertebral disc extrusion (IVDE) underwent surgery to relieve spinal cord pressure. After the surgery, MRI scans showed that all dogs had some leftover disc material, but this did not help predict whether they would recover neurologically. The study found no significant differences in spinal cord compression or the amount of leftover material between dogs that did well after surgery and those that did not. This suggests that the amount of residual material or spinal cord compression seen on MRI does not determine recovery success.

People also search for: dog back surgery recovery · intervertebral disc extrusion prognosis · MRI results after dog spine surgery

Abstract

Published studies on the validity of using quantitative MRI measures of pre- and postoperative spinal cord (SC) compression as prognostic indicators for dogs undergoing surgery for intervertebral disc extrusion (IVDE) are currently limited. The aim of this retrospective analytical study was to describe the volume of postoperative residual extradural material (VREM) and the ratio of the cross-sectional area (CSA) of maximum SC compression to the CSA of SC in a compression-free intervertebral space as MRI measures of preoperative and postoperative compression (residual spinal cord compression, RSCC), and to compare these measures between the neurological outcome in a group of dogs. Inclusion criteria were dogs that underwent surgery for thoracolumbar IVDE, were imaged pre- and immediately postoperatively by MRI, and had a neurological follow-up examination 2 to 5 weeks postoperatively. Two blinded observers independently performed measurements in pre- and postoperative MRI studies. Dogs were classified into positive outcome (PO) and negative outcome (NO) groups based on follow-up neurologic examination scores. Seventeen dogs were included (12 PO, 5 NO). Interobserver agreement for MRI measurements was good to excellent (ICCs: 0.76-0.97). The prevalence of residual extradural material in postoperative MRI studies was 100%. No significant differences in mean preoperative SC compression, mean RSCC, mean SC decompression, or VREM were found between outcome groups (P = .25; P = .28; P = .91, P = .98). In conclusion, neither postoperative VREM nor RSCC could predict successful neurological outcomes.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38183621/