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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with hind limb ataxia diagnosed with spinal neurenteric cyst

By Alder, Daniela S et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2017·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Spinal neurenteric cyst in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

An 11-year-old English Cocker Spaniel was brought in for chronic problems with coordination in the hind legs, known as ataxia. Despite normal physical and lab tests, a neurologic exam showed severe ataxia and some pain in the lower back. An MRI revealed a cyst pressing on the spinal cord, which was surgically removed. After the surgery, the dog recovered well and was back to normal a year later, living for two more years before being euthanized for unrelated heart disease, with no further neurological issues.

People also search for: dog hind leg coordination problems · English Cocker Spaniel ataxia treatment · spinal cyst surgery in dogs

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION An 11-year-old English Cocker Spaniel was evaluated because of chronic progressive ataxia of the hind limbs. CLINICAL FINDINGS The dog had no history of previous illness, and findings of physical examination and laboratory tests were unremarkable. Neurologic examination revealed that the dog was ambulatory with severe ataxia of the hind limbs. Proprioception was decreased in the right and left hind limbs (right affected more than left), and spinal reflexes were bilaterally unremarkable. Moderate signs of pain were detected during palpation of the lumbar portion of the vertebral column. Findings suggested a lesion within the thoracolumbar or lumbar segments of the spinal cord. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed extradural spinal cord compression attributable to an extradural space-occupying lesion originating from or infiltrating the L4 lamina on the right side. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME Hemilaminectomy was performed to remove the extradural lesion. Histologic findings for tissue samples collected during the procedure were consistent with a neurenteric cyst. The late onset and progression of clinical signs of this rare congenital malformation were suspected to have been the result of enlargement of the neurenteric cyst through continuous production of mucus by goblet cells. The dog responded favorably to surgical decompression and was clinically normal 1 year after surgery. It was euthanized 2 years after surgery for an unrelated reason (end-stage heart disease), and no neurologic deficits were evident before that point. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Congenital neurenteric cysts should be considered as a differential diagnosis for neoplastic disease in dogs in which results of diagnostic imaging indicate the presence of an extradural mass affecting vertebral structures.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28306488/