Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Great Dane with neck spinal compression treated by surgery
By Tuan, Jayson et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2019·Fitzpatrick Referrals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Ventral distraction-stabilization in 5 continuous sites for the treatment of cervical spondylomyelopathy in a Great Dane.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 4-year-old male Great Dane was brought in because he was having trouble moving his legs due to cervical spondylomyelopathy (CSM), a condition that compresses the spinal cord. The veterinarians performed surgery using a special technique to stabilize the spine at five different points. Just ten days after the surgery, the dog showed significant improvement in his ability to move, and follow-up scans taken 27 months later showed that the spinal canal had continued to improve. This surgery helped both the dog's mobility and the underlying spinal issues caused by CSM.
People also search for: Great Dane cervical spondylomyelopathy treatment · dog spinal surgery recovery · how to help my dog with leg weakness
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To report the combined use of novel and commercially available implants for ventral distraction-stabilization of 5 continuous compressive sites in a Great Dane with cervical spondylomyelopathy (CSM). STUDY DESIGN: Case report. ANIMALS: One 4-year-old male Great Dane weighing 78 kg. METHODS: A tetraparetic 4-year-old Great Dane with osseous-associated CSM (OA-CSM) with 5 sites of dorsolateral compression was presented for surgical intervention. Custom designed Fitz intervertebral traction screws (FITS) and a commercially available polyaxial spinal system were used for ventral distraction-stabilization of all lesions. Multiple neurological reevaluations were performed, with the final evaluation at 27 months postoperatively. Preoperative, immediate-postoperative, and 27 month-postoperative computed tomography (CT) images were retrospectively reviewed to compare the vertebral canal dimensions at the affected sites. RESULTS: Multilevel distraction-stabilization technique resulted in improvement of the dog's neurological function by 10 days postoperatively. The vertebral canal measurements were revealed to have improved in over half of the measured variables when the 27-month-postoperative images were compared with the preoperative CT images. Increased vertebral canal dimensions were observed immediately after surgery, and some of these measurements continued to improve by 27 months postoperatively. CONCLUSION: Ventral distraction-stabilization technique with custom-designed FITS and a polyaxial spinal system resulted in both clinical improvement and objective improvement in spinal canal measurements in an OA-CSM-affected Great Dane. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: An indirect decompression technique can eliminate dynamic movements and result in regression of vertebral canal bony proliferation in dogs with OA-CSM.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30828843/