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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Spinal MRI findings in cats with disk and spine problems

By Soteras, Marc Pérez et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2024·1AniCura Ars Veterinaria Hospital Veterinari, Spain·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Spinal magnetic resonance imaging in cats: differences in clinical significance of intervertebral disk extrusion, intervertebral disk protrusion, and degenerative lumbosacral stenosis.

Species:
cat
Brain & nervesCats

Plain-English summary

A group of 114 cats showing signs of spinal problems underwent MRI to check for issues like intervertebral disk herniation and other degenerative spinal changes. The results showed that about 70% of these cats had some form of spinal degeneration, with intervertebral disk degeneration being the most common issue. In particular, intervertebral disk extrusion was always linked to the symptoms the cats were experiencing, while degenerative lumbosacral stenosis was often found but not necessarily causing the problems. This information can help veterinarians better understand and treat spinal issues in cats.

People also search for: cat back pain MRI · cat spinal problems treatment · signs of intervertebral disk disease in cats

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the occurrence of degenerative changes affecting the vertebral column in cats, assess their clinical significance, and determine the occurrence in cats with intervertebral disk herniation compared to other spinal diseases. ANIMALS: 114 client-owned cats. METHODS: Hospital records were retrospectively reviewed for cats with suspected myelopathy that had undergone spinal MRI. Signalment; history; neurological examination; neurolocalization; primary diagnosis; presence, type, and location of intervertebral disk herniation; and presence and location of other degenerative spinal changes (intervertebral disk degeneration [IVDD], spondylosis deformans [SD], end plate changes, dorsal compressions [DC], and foraminal stenosis [FS]) were recorded. RESULTS: 70% of cats showed at least 1 spinal degenerative change. The most common change was IVDD, followed by SD and intervertebral disk protrusion (IVDP), while intervertebral disk extrusion (IVDE), end plate changes, DC, and FS were uncommon to rare. Primary complaint was attributed to a degenerative condition in 22% of cats, including 100% with IVDE, 9% with IVDP, and 43% with degenerative lumbosacral stenosis (DLSS). The occurrence of degenerative spinal changes and number of intervertebral disks affected by IVDD significantly increased with age and body weight. Age was positively correlated with the occurrence of SD and DLSS. Intervertebral disk degeneration, IVDP, SD, DC, and FS were more prevalent in the lumbosacral junction. Cats with IVDD were significantly more likely to show IVDE and IVDP. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This study revealed that in a population of cats presenting for signs of myelopathy, IVDE was always responsible for the clinical presentation, DLSS was commonly considered incidental, and IVDP was infrequently related to neurological signs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38977003/