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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Spinal shock in dogs with severe spinal injury and rehab timing

By Gouveia, Débora et al.·Published in Research in veterinary science·2023·bida Veterinary Hospital - Arr&#xe1·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Spinal shock in severe SCI dogs and early implementation of intensive neurorehabilitation programs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with severe spinal cord injuries (SCI) were studied to see how spinal shock affected their recovery and rehabilitation. Dogs that received early intensive rehabilitation had a better chance of walking again compared to those who didn't. Specifically, 66.9% of dogs with spinal shock were able to walk again, while 97.6% of those without spinal shock achieved this. The study found that starting rehabilitation within 24-48 hours of injury was crucial for improving outcomes. Overall, early intervention and tailored rehabilitation plans based on spinal shock severity can significantly help dogs recover from serious injuries.

People also search for: dog spinal cord injury recovery · dog rehabilitation after injury · signs of spinal shock in dogs

Abstract

Spinal shock is complex, paradoxical with sudden presentation, possibly leading to a guarded prognosis. Thus, it is suggested the need for early implementation of intensive neurorehabilitation. This prospective controlled blinded cohort study aims to understand the implication of spinal shock in neurorehabilitation of severe SCI dogs and the importance of its evaluation thought a spinal shock scale (SSS). 371 dogs were randomized by stratification according the presence of spinal shock in the SG (n = 245) or CG (n = 126). The SSS, a punctuation scale (0-7), was evaluated at admission and each 6 h for 3 days, each day for 15 days, each week for 6 weeks, each month until 3 months, followed by 3 monthly follow-ups. All dogs had similar land and underwater treadmill training with functional electrical stimulation. Observational dataset allowed an approximate level of power (1-β) of 0.90 and an α (Type I error) of 0.01, with a total of 11,088 SSS observations between two blinded observers and 18% of disagreement. 75% of the dogs were admitted in 24-48 h after injury, allowing early detection of spinal shock, and dogs admitted at 72 h with SSS ≥ 4 were not able to achieve ambulation. Regarding ambulation rate, there was a significant difference between groups, with 66.9% of ambulation in the SG and 97.6% in the CG. Also, there was a difference in regard to time until ambulation, with a mean of 31.57 days for the SG and 23.02 for the CG. The SSS estimated marginal means had an exponential decrease within the first 6 h, followed by a slower decrease, but always faster in spinal shock dogs diagnosed with non-compressive myelopathies. Thus, early intensive neurorehabilitation in dogs after severe SCI may benefit from SSS classifications at admission and during treatment to establish different therapeutic protocols according to each patient's needs, especially in deep pain negative dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37722219/