| Literature DB >> 21851667 |
Emma J O'Neill1, Darren Merrett, Boyd Jones.
Abstract
: Granulomatous meningoencephalomyelitis (GME) is an inflammatory disease of the central nervous system in dogs that is characterised by focal or disseminated granulomatous lesions within the brain and/or spinal cord, non-suppurative meningitis and perivascular mononuclear cuffing. The aetiology of the disease remains unknown, although an immune-mediated cause is suspected. This article reviewed the typical history, clinical signs and pathology of the condition along with current opinions on pathogenesis. The potential differential diagnoses for the disease were discussed along with current treatment options.Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 21851667 PMCID: PMC3113901 DOI: 10.1186/2046-0481-58-2-86
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ir Vet J ISSN: 0368-0762 Impact factor: 2.146
Figure 1Sections from brains of GME cases: A) Section showing a characteristic perivascular cuff lesion around a blood vessel comprising a predominantly mononuclear inflammatory cell infiltrate. Haemotoxylin and Eosin. Original magnification ×40 (top left). B) Section demonstrating characteristic 'whorling' pattern of inflammatory cells within the CNS white matter. Reticulin-staining. Original magnification ×20 (bottom left).
GME cases: the characteristic history and patient data, with variations
| Classically ... | ... but there is marked variability | |
|---|---|---|
| Young adults - middle aged dogs (mean approximately 5 years) [ | 5 months - 12 years [ | |
| Small breed dog especially toy and terrier breeds and Poodles [ | ANY breed may get GME, e.g., German shepherd dogs, Great Danes, Pointers, Weimeraners [ | |
| GME occurs in both sexes; however, there appears to be a higher prevalence in females [ | ||
Summary of the clinical signs typically associated with lesions in specific regions of the brain (adapted from [7])
| Fore brain: cerebral cortex and thalamus | Cerebellum |
|---|---|
| Seizures | Ataxia |
| Behavioural changes (loss of training, failure to recognise owner, aggression, hyperexcitability) | Tremor |
| Altered mental status (apathy, depression, disorientation, lethargy, coma) | Hypermetria |
| Abnormal movements, postures (circling, pacing, wandering, head-pressing) | Broad-based stance |
| Contralateral deficits: postural reactions, vision, menace response, facial sensation | Menace deficits + normal vision |
| No weakness | |
| Upper motor neuron paresis/paralysis all four limbs or contralateral to lesion | Normal gait |
| Postural reaction deficits all four limbs or contralateral to lesion | Altered mental status (disorientation, lethargy, coma) |
| Mental depression/coma | Changes in behaviour (aggression/hyperexcitability) |
| Ipsilateral oculomotor and trochlear deficits | Bilateral cranial nerve II deficits at optic chiasm |
| Hyperventilation | Abnormal movements/postures (tight circling, pacing, |
| wandering, head-pressing, trembling) | |
| Abnormal temperature regulation | |
| Abnormal appetite | |
| Endocrine disturbances | |
| Seizures | |
| Head tilt | Ipsilateral hemiparesis/asymmetrical tetraparesis: |
| Nystagmus - positional, vertical, horizontal, rotary | Upper motor neuron signs |
| Ataxia | Ipsilateral postural reaction deficits |
| Postural reaction deficits | Cranial nerve abnormalities: V-VII, IX-XII |
| Altered mental status | Altered mental status: depression |
| Other cranial nerve signs | Irregular respiration |
The frequency of clinical signs described in 151 GME cases reported in the literature
| Clinical signs | Number of cases |
|---|---|
| Head tilt | 6 |
| Circling | 7 |
| Nystagmus | 1 |
| Seizures | 11 |
| Behavioural changes | 7 |
| Depression | 10 |
| Ataxia | 22 |
| Gait abnormalities | 16 |
| Proprioceptive deficits | 16 |
| Postural reaction deficits | 5 |
| Dysmetria | 11 |
| Exaggerated reflexes | 8 |
| Tremors | 6 |
| Hyperaesthesia | 15 |
| Pelvic/thoracic limb paresis | 17 |
| Cranial nerve deficits | 17 |
| Blindness/optic neuritis | 15 |
| Facial paralysis | 1 |
| Febrile | 19 |
| Cervical pain | 37 |
| Forebrain | 25 |
| Brainstem | 15 |
| Vestibular | 13 |
| Cortical | 11 |
| Cerebellar/vestibular | 10 |
| Myelopathies | 7 |
| Spinal cord | 4 |
| Cerebellar | 3 |
It should be noted that these numbers represent an approximation only. The major limitation is that papers vary in the details given and in their classification of the clinical signs. Some listed the specific clinical signs, others listed the affected regions of the brain. Here the signs are listed as they were given in the papers (from [8,19,2,16,3,32,39,27,21,33,40,24,15]).
CSF in granulomatous meningoencephalomyelitis: the classical findings, variations and the responses to treatment with corticosteroids
| Classically ... | ... but there is marked variability | |
|---|---|---|
| 50 - 900 [ | 0 - 11,840 | |
| Occasional cases (~10%) may have normal leucocyte counts [ | ||
| Mononuclear pleocytosis usually consisting of lymphocytes (60 to 90%), monocytes (10 to 20%) and variable numbers of large macrophages with lacy cytoplasm [ | Occasional cases (~10%) may have up to 50-60% neutrophils [ | |
| 40 to 400 [ | 9 to 1,848 [ | |
| Occasional cases (~5 to 10%) may have normal protein concentrations [ | ||
| In one study, eight dogs were treated with corticosteroids prior to CSF analysis and the mean WCC | ||
| In another study of 16 CSF samples analysed, the only two samples that were normal were in dogs | ||
Figure 2Cerebrospinal fluid cytology demonstrating mononuclear cell pleocytosis in a case of GME. Original magnification ×40.