Literature DB >> 15472486

A case of shaker dog disease in a miniature dachshund.

Yoshiki Yamaya1, Etsuko Iwakami, Masashi Goto, Hiroshi Koie, Toshihiro Watari, Shigeo Tanaka, Akira Takeuchi, Mikihiko Tokuriki.   

Abstract

A male miniature Dachshund, twenty-two months of age, was referred with paroxysmal generalized tremors as a main clinical sign. There were no abnormalities in the neurological examination except the lack of bilateral menace responses, and in the magnetic resonance imaging of its brain. Analysis of cerebro-spinal fluid revealed a slight rise in protein concentration and an increase in the number of cells. This case with brown hair was diagnosed as the shaker dog disease, which has also been well known as "little white shakers" syndrome due to being found in small dogs with white hair, because the clinical signs were exactly analogous to the shaker dog disease, and the generalized tremors disappeared on the first day after the administration of prednisolone and diazepam.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15472486     DOI: 10.1292/jvms.66.1159

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vet Med Sci        ISSN: 0916-7250            Impact factor:   1.267


  1 in total

1.  Presence of cerebrospinal fluid antibodies associated with autoimmune encephalitis of humans in dogs with neurologic disease.

Authors:  Emma G Stafford; Amanda Kortum; Aude Castel; Lauren Green; Jeanie Lau; Peter J Early; Karen R Muñana; Christopher L Mariani; Jeffrey A Yoder; Natasha J Olby
Journal:  J Vet Intern Med       Date:  2019-09-08       Impact factor: 3.333

  1 in total

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