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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Severe neurologic signs cleared after lipid therapy in young dog

By Spillane, Amanda M et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2021·Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Resolution of Severe Neurologic Signs Following Intravenous Lipid Emulsion Therapy in a Young Dog With a Portosystemic Shunt: Case Report.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 5-month-old male Great Pyrenees was brought to the vet after suddenly showing severe neurologic signs, including stupor and head turning, likely due to ingesting a toxic amount of naproxen. The vet administered intravenous lipid emulsion (ILE) therapy, which quickly resolved the dog's symptoms within 30 minutes. Blood tests later confirmed liver issues, and the dog was diagnosed with a portosystemic shunt, a condition affecting blood flow in the liver. After ILE therapy and additional treatments, the dog's condition improved significantly, and he underwent a procedure to correct the shunt.

People also search for: Great Pyrenees neurologic signs · dog naproxen poisoning treatment · portosystemic shunt in dogs

Abstract

A 5-month-old male intact Great Pyrenees was presented for an acute onset of severe neurologic signs (stupor, absent menace, intermittent head turn to the left). The patient's history included possible naproxen ingestion with a maximum ingested dose of 59 mg/kg, exceeding the reported dose of >50 mg/kg known to cause neurologic signs. Blood sampling for baseline bloodwork was performed, and intravenous lipid emulsion (ILE) was subsequently administered, for treatment of the suspected toxicosis. Due to severe and life-threatening neurologic signs, other methods of decontamination were contraindicated and unlikely to be effective; extracorporeal therapy was also unavailable. Complete resolution of neurologic signs occurred 30 min after completion of ILE therapy. At this time, the owners found the missing naproxen tablets after returning home and the bloodwork results returned revealing findings consistent with hepatic encephalopathy. The fasted blood ammonia concentration immediately prior to ILE administration was 702.1 μg/dL (reference interval, RI: 24-36 μg/dL) and decreased to 194.1 μg/dL 24 h later. In the first 24 h, the patient also received three doses of lactulose, N-acetylcysteine, and intravenous fluids. The patient was subsequently diagnosed with a single, large intrahepatic portosystemic shuntcomputed tomography and underwent an endovascular coil embolization procedure. Given the rapid and dramatic improvement in severe neurologic signs after ILE therapy alone, it is strongly suspected that this treatment resulted in improvement of hepatic encephalopathy.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34957288/