Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Brain abscess from plant stuck in dog's brain treated with surgery
By A. Cloquell & I. Mateo·Published in Open Veterinary Journal·2019·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: Surgical management of a brain abscess due to plant foreign body in a dog
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A Great Dane was brought in with signs of brain problems, including seizures, after a grass awn (a type of plant) migrated into its brain and caused an abscess. The vet performed surgery to drain the abscess and remove the foreign body, followed by antibiotic treatment. After the surgery, the dog was discharged and continued to have occasional seizures but showed no other neurological issues. A follow-up MRI six months later showed that the brain lesion had resolved and the surrounding tissues were normal.
People also search for: dog seizures after brain surgery · Great Dane brain abscess treatment · grass awn foreign body in dog
Abstract
Background: Intracranial abscesses as a result of grass awn migration have been rarely described in the veterinary literature. The identification of their radiological features is mandatory for proper diagnosis. As occurs with abscesses in other organs, surgical drainage and directed antibiotic therapy should be considered the treatment of choice. Case Description: A clinical case of a Great Dane dog with forebrain signs and magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography findings compatible with intracranial abscess associated with inflammatory changes in orbital musculature is described. An exploratory rostro-tentorial craniotomy with durotomy was performed, allowing the drainage of purulent content and the extraction of a plant foreign body from the cerebral parenchyma. Antibiotic treatment was instituted and the patient was discharged without recurrence of neurological deficits other than quarterly seizures. Six months later, revision magnetic resonance was performed, revealing the resolution of the intracranial lesion and the normalization of the extracranial tissues. Conclusion: This is the first case in veterinary literature in which a grass awn has been surgically extracted from the brain of a dog with long-term outcome described. Observed changes in the extracranial musculature were fundamental to establish the pre-surgical diagnosis of a migratory foreign body.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/31998614