Vansteenkiste Daniella, Martin-Vaquero Paula, Bonelli Marília, da Costa Luciana B, da Costa Ronaldo C
College of Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University, 601 Vernon L. Tharp St, Columbus, OH, USA.
Freelance medical and veterinary writer, Madrid, Spain.
BMC Vet Res. 2019 Mar 12;15(1):90. doi: 10.1186/s12917-019-1835-7.
Osseous- associated cervical spondylomyelopathy (OA-CSM) has a high prevalence in Great Danes. In order to understand the progression of osseous changes, we aimed to perform a long-term computed tomographic (CT) follow-up study of Great Dane dogs with and without OA-CSM. Canine CSM is comparable to a common neurologic disease often diagnosed in older people termed cervical spondylotic myelopathy or degenerative cervical myelopathy, which is progressive in nature. The natural history of cervical spondylotic myelopathy in people has been well described, whereas there is scarce information on the natural history of canine OA-CSM. Our first goal was to evaluate if follow-up CT studies showed any changes compared to initial CT studies in Great Dane dogs with a diagnosis of OA-CSM. Our second goal was to establish whether clinically normal Great Danes went on to develop any vertebral changes or clinical signs consistent with OA-CSM. We enrolled Great Danes diagnosed with OA-CSM and clinically normal Great Danes who had previously participated in a prospective study. All dogs had clinical and CT follow-up evaluations.
Twelve Great Dane dogs were investigated: six OA-CSM affected and six clinically normal dogs. The median time between CT studies was 28 months (OA-CSM dogs) and 25 months (normal dogs). On follow-up CT, two OA-CSM-affected dogs developed new sites of stenosis, and two clinically normal dogs developed new sites of stenosis (one each). Disc spaces most commonly affected were C4-C5, C5-C6 and C6-C7. New sites of foraminal stenosis were noted in two of the CSM-affected and four of the clinically normal dogs. Morphometric evaluation showed no statistically significant differences between the initial and follow-up CT studies in the OA-CSM affected or normal groups.
Our long-term CT follow-up study documented progression of vertebral canal stenosis in four out of twelve dogs. The majority of dogs did not develop new sites of stenosis or show progression of vertebral lesions.
骨相关性颈椎病(OA-CSM)在大丹犬中具有较高的患病率。为了了解骨质变化的进展情况,我们旨在对患有和未患有OA-CSM的大丹犬进行长期计算机断层扫描(CT)随访研究。犬类CSM与一种常见于老年人的神经疾病类似,称为颈椎脊髓病或退行性颈椎脊髓病,其本质上是进行性的。人类颈椎脊髓病的自然史已有详尽描述,而关于犬类OA-CSM自然史的信息却很少。我们的首要目标是评估在诊断为OA-CSM的大丹犬中,随访CT研究与初始CT研究相比是否显示出任何变化。我们的第二个目标是确定临床上正常的大丹犬是否会出现与OA-CSM一致的任何椎体变化或临床体征。我们纳入了诊断为OA-CSM的大丹犬以及之前参与过一项前瞻性研究的临床上正常的大丹犬。所有犬只均进行了临床和CT随访评估。
共对12只大丹犬进行了调查:其中6只患有OA-CSM,6只临床上正常。CT研究之间的中位时间为28个月(OA-CSM犬)和25个月(正常犬)。在随访CT中,2只患有OA-CSM的犬出现了新的狭窄部位,2只临床上正常的犬也出现了新的狭窄部位(各1只)。最常受影响的椎间盘间隙为C4-C5、C5-C6和C6-C7。在2只患有CSM的犬和4只临床上正常的犬中发现了新的椎间孔狭窄部位。形态学评估显示OA-CSM患犬组或正常组的初始CT研究与随访CT研究之间无统计学显著差异。
我们的长期CT随访研究记录了12只犬中有4只出现了椎管狭窄的进展。大多数犬未出现新的狭窄部位或椎体病变进展。