Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with right side facial twitching caused by brain tumor
By Holland, C T et al.·Published in Australian veterinary journal·2010·Merewether Veterinary Hospital, Australia·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Unilateral facial myokymia in a dog with an intracranial meningioma.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 23-month-old male Cavalier King Charles spaniel was brought in because of unusual rippling movements in the right side of his face that lasted for six months. Over time, the dog developed a droopy eyelid and facial paralysis on the same side, which eventually led to more serious issues like difficulty with tears and swallowing. Unfortunately, after nearly six years of these symptoms, the dog was euthanized, and a postmortem exam revealed a malignant brain tumor (meningioma) that had been affecting his facial nerve function.
People also search for: dog facial twitching · Cavalier King Charles spaniel neurological issues · dog meningioma symptoms
Abstract
A 23-month-old castrated male Cavalier King Charles spaniel was evaluated because of a 6-month history of unusual rippling/undulating movements of the right facial muscles that were continuous and persisted during sleep. Neurological examination revealed narrowing of the right palpebral fissure and unilateral right-sided facial myokymia that was characterised by myokymic, and to a lesser degree, neuromyotonic discharges on concentric needle electromyographic examination. After persisting unchanged for almost 2.5 years from its onset, the facial myokymia gradually disappeared over a 6-month period concomitant with the emergence of a persistent ipsilateral facial paralysis and head tilt. At 5 years and 9 months after the first examination, signs of ipsilateral lacrimal, pharyngeal and laryngeal dysfunction became evident and the dog was euthanased. Postmortem examination identified a malignant (WHO grade III) meningioma in the right cerebellopontomedullary angle that compressed the ventrolateral cranial medulla, effaced the jugular foramen and internal acoustic meatus and extended into the facial canal of the petrous temporal bone. Novel findings were the unique observation of isolated unilateral facial myokymia preceding diagnosis of a meningioma affecting facial nerve function within the caudal cranial fossa and the remarkably long duration of neurological signs (75 months) attributable to the neoplasm.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20726972/