Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Vertebral changes linked to Spirocerca lupi infection in dogs
By Kirberger, Robert M et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2013·Department of Companion Animal Clinical Studies·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Spirocerca lupi-associated vertebral changes: a radiologic-pathologic study.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with spinal issues were found to have changes in their vertebrae linked to a parasite called Spirocerca lupi, which can cause masses in the esophagus. The study looked at ten dogs that showed signs of spondylitis (inflammation of the spine) and found that while some inflammation was present, it was mild and not the main cause of the spinal problems. The researchers noted that the changes in the spine might be related to the esophageal mass caused by the parasite. More research is needed to understand the exact relationship between the parasite and the spinal changes.
People also search for: dog spinal problems · Spirocerca lupi treatment · dog spondylitis symptoms
Abstract
Spirocerca lupi causes a caudal esophageal mass in dogs which may be accompanied by aortic changes and caudal thoracic spondylitis. Previous literature hypothesized that the spondylitis was caused by either aberrant larval migration or was secondary to the inflammation caused by the aortic migration. The current study aimed to evaluate these hypotheses. Ten dogs of various breeds and ages with radiographic evidence of spondylitis, which were necropsied, had the affected vertebrae removed and prepared for light and transmission electron microscopy examination. Transverse and sagittal sections of the ventral vertebrae were taken from 27 spondylitis and 8 spondylosis deformans lesions as well as from 8 normal vertebrae. Early spondylitis changes were characterized by periosteal woven new bone covered by hyperplastic periosteum with some involvement of the ventral longitudinal ligament. More mature lesions were characterized by nodules of denser trabecular bone and cartilage, also covered by hyperplastic periosteum and involved the ventral longitudinal ligament. It was difficult to distinguish the spondylitis and spondylosis deformans new bone. Inflammation was seen in five spondylitis cases (edema, lymphocytes, plasma cells, eosinophils and fibrin fibers). Spirocerca eggs were seen in one histologic section. This study shows that inflammation is mild and inconsistent in spirocercosis-induced spondylitis and that aberrant migration of the larvae or adults did not appear to be a predominant cause. Inflammatory mediators or osteoproliferative growth factors, which may be related to the primary esophageal lesion or to the worm itself, could be involved. This requires further investigation.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23298568/