Braund K G, Steinberg H S, Shores A, Steiss J E, Mehta J R, Toivio-Kinnucan M, Amling K A
Neuromuscular Laboratory, College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University, AL 36849-3501.
J Am Vet Med Assoc. 1989 Jun 15;194(12):1735-40.
Six dogs with laryngeal paralysis had clinical, electrophysiologic, and pathologic evidence of a more generalized polyneuropathy. Three of the dogs were young Dalmatians, one was a young Bouvier des Flandres, and two were older, large-breed dogs. The results of this study suggest that laryngeal paralysis in dogs may frequently be one clinical sign of an underlying, more generalized polyneuropathy. Two forms of this generalized polyneuropathy may exist: an early form, as seen in young dogs with congenital or hereditary disease, and a delayed-onset form that is usually found in older dogs with so-called idiopathic laryngeal paralysis, some of which may have hypothyroidism.