Dell'Apa Diletta, Fumeo Martina, Volta Antonella, Bernardini Marco, Fidanzio Francesca, Buffagni Valentina, Christen Matthias, Jagannathan Vidhya, Leeb Tosso, Bianchi Ezio
Department of Veterinary Science, University of Parma, Parma, Italy.
Neurodiagnostic Unit, Anicura Portoni Rossi Veterinary Hospital, Bologna, Italy.
Front Vet Sci. 2023 May 25;10:1201484. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2023.1201484. eCollection 2023.
Two boxer dogs from the same litter were presented at 3 months of age for urinary and fecal incontinence. Both dogs had an abnormal tail consisting of a small stump, an atonic anal sphincter, and absent perineal reflex and sensation. Neurological evaluation was indicative of a lesion of the cauda equina or sacral spinal cord. Radiology and CT scan of the spine displayed similar findings in the two dogs that were indicative of sacral agenesis. Indeed, they had 6 lumbar vertebrae followed by a lumbosacral transitional vertebra, lacking a complete spinous process, and a hypoplastic vertebra carrying 2 hypoplastic sacral transverse processes as the only remnant of the sacral bone. Caudal vertebrae were absent in one of the dogs. On MRI, one dog had a dural sac occupying the entire spinal canal and ending in a subfascial fat structure. In the other dog, the dural sac finished in an extracanalar, subfascial, well-defined cystic structure, communicating with the subarachnoid space, and consistent with a meningocele. Sacral agenesis-that is the partial or complete absence of the sacral bones-is a neural tube defect occasionally reported in humans with spina bifida occulta. Sacral agenesis has been described in human and veterinary medicine in association with conditions such as caudal regression syndrome, perosomus elumbis, and Currarino syndrome. These neural tube defects are caused by genetic and/or environmental factors. Despite thorough genetic investigation, no candidate variants in genes with known functional impact on bone development or sacral development could be found in the affected dogs. To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first report describing similar sacral agenesis in two related boxer dogs.
同一窝的两只拳师犬在3个月大时出现尿失禁和大便失禁。两只犬的尾巴均异常,表现为短小残端、肛门括约肌张力缺乏、会阴反射和感觉缺失。神经学评估表明存在马尾或骶脊髓损伤。脊柱的放射学检查和CT扫描显示两只犬有相似的表现,提示骶骨发育不全。事实上,它们有6个腰椎,接着是一个腰骶过渡椎,缺乏完整的棘突,还有一个发育不全的椎骨,带有2个发育不全的骶横突,是骶骨的唯一残余部分。其中一只犬没有尾椎。在MRI上,一只犬的硬脊膜囊占据整个椎管,并在筋膜下脂肪结构处终止。另一只犬的硬脊膜囊在椎管外、筋膜下以一个边界清晰的囊性结构结束,与蛛网膜下腔相通,符合脊膜膨出。骶骨发育不全,即骶骨部分或完全缺失,是一种神经管缺陷,偶尔在隐性脊柱裂的人类中报道。骶骨发育不全在人和兽医学中已被描述与诸如尾椎退化综合征、脊柱裂胎儿、库拉里诺综合征等情况相关。这些神经管缺陷是由遗传和/或环境因素引起的。尽管进行了全面的基因调查,但在受影响的犬中未发现对骨骼发育或骶骨发育有已知功能影响的基因中的候选变异。据作者所知,这是首次报道两只相关拳师犬出现相似的骶骨发育不全。