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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Surgery to relieve spinal disk pressure at T1-2 in a Dachshund

By Cappelle, Kelsey K & Reaugh, H Fulton·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2018·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Sternotomy and ventral slot decompression for treatment of T1-2 intervertebral disk disease in a Dachshund.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 9-year-old male Dachshund was brought in for sudden paralysis in his back legs that had lasted less than a day. After tests showed a serious spinal cord issue caused by a herniated disk in his back, the vet performed a specialized surgery to remove the disk material pressing on his spinal cord. Thankfully, the surgery went well, and the dog was able to feel pain in his back legs right after the operation. Just two days later, he regained the ability to move his legs again.

People also search for: Dachshund back leg paralysis · dog spinal surgery recovery · intervertebral disk disease treatment

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION A 9-year-old 7.5-kg (16.5-lb) castrated male Dachshund was referred for emergency evaluation of pelvic limb paraplegia of < 24 hours' duration. CLINICAL FINDINGS A spinal cord lesion between T3 and L3 was suspected given the dog's history and neurologic examination results. Computed tomography and myelography spanning T3 through L4 identified an extradural compressive lesion at the L3-4 disk space. Hemilaminectomy was performed, and disk material adhered to and compressing the spinal cord was identified. However, because the material appeared to have been present for an extended period, postoperative CT of the cervicothoracic region was performed, which revealed extrusion of disk material from the T1-2 space and marked spinal cord compression. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME A sternotomy of the manubrium and ventral slot decompression of the T1-2 disk space were performed successfully without entering the thoracic cavity. A large amount of disk material was removed from the spinal canal. No loss of intrathoracic negative pressure was appreciated, and intraoperative complications included only mild hemorrhage. The dog maintained pelvic limb pain sensation postoperatively and regained motor function 2 days after surgery. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Intervertebral disk disease is rare at T1-2 in Dachshunds. Typically, a dorsal approach has been used to decompress the spinal cord, but findings for this dog suggested that a ventral approach may also be appropriate. Consideration should be given to include the T1-2 disk space when performing advanced imaging in dogs because of the inconsistent ability to identify lesions at this location by means of neurologic examination.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29963958/