| Literature DB >> 26858952 |
Sarah Giambuzzi1, Theresa Pancotto2, Jeffrey Ruth2.
Abstract
Intervertebral disk disease (IVDD) is common in dogs; cervical IVDD accounts for 13-25% of all cases. Ventral slot decompression provides access to ventral and centrally extruded or protruded disk material. However, procedures to remove dorsally or laterally displaced material are more difficult. This case series describes the use of perineural injection as a potential treatment option for dogs experiencing root-signature signs associated with lateralized disk material in the cervical spine. Five dogs underwent fluoroscopically guided perineural injection of methylprednisolone ± bupivacaine. Most patients experienced improvement in root-signature signs and remained pain free without the assistance of oral pain medication. These findings suggest the perineural injection of methylprednisolone ± bupivacaine represents a viable option for dogs with cervical lateralized disk material causing root-signature signs.Entities:
Keywords: fluoroscopy; intervertebral disk disease; lateralized disk; perineural; root-signature
Year: 2016 PMID: 26858952 PMCID: PMC4728328 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2016.00001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Summary of patient data.
| Case/signalment | Clinical signs | Rx at presentation | Imaging type | Pertinent imaging findings | Injected Rx | Oral Rx | Complications | Outcome | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 years CM Dachshund | 1 month cervical pain, left forelimb root-signature signs | Deraxocib, tramadol | CT | Left lateralized extrusion of mineralized disk material at C3–C4, causing presumed compression of the left third spinal nerve root | C3–C4 | 1.4 mg/kg tramadol q8 h | Transient respiratory paralysis | Immediate resolution of pain and root-signature sings | 2 weeks – pain free |
| 10 years M Lhasa apso | 1 week cervical pain, left forelimb root-signature signs | Meloxicam, diazepam | CT and MRI | Left lateralized extrusion of mineralized disk material at C3–C4 causing compression of the left third spinal nerve root | C3–C4 | 3.2 mg/kg tramadol q8–12 h | None | Immediate improvement | 1 month – pain free |
| 13 years SF mixed breed dog | 2 weeks cervical pain, left forelimb root-signature signs | Methocarbamol, gabapentin, tramadol | MRI | Left lateralized extrusion of disk material at C5–C6 causing compression of the left fifth spinal nerve root | C5–C6 | 5 mg/kg tramadol q12 h | None | Marked improvement within 1 week | 6 months – continued improvement, gabapentin PRN |
| 11 years CM mixed breed dog | 1 week cervical pain, tetraparesis, left forelimb root-signature signs | None | MRI | Left lateralized protrusion of disk annulus at C6–C7 causing compression of the left sixth spinal nerve root | C6–C7 | 3–4.4 mg/kg tramadol q8 h | None | Improved pain control within 2 weeks | 3 months – pain free, medications discontinued |
| 6 years CM Dachshund | 2 weeks cervical pain and left forelimb root-signature | Tramadol, methocarbamol, prednisone | MRI | Left lateralized extrusion of disk material at C6–C7 causing mild spinal cord compression and compression of the left sixth spinal nerve root | C6–C7 | 2.5 mg/kg tramadol q8–12 h | None | Mild improvement in hospital | 3 weeks – moderate improvement |
Figure 1Left lateral fluoroscopic projection of the cervical vertebral column (Case 1). A spinal needle is inserted dorsally at the level of the C3–C4 intervertebral foramen. Opacification of the C3-C4 intervertebral disk and foramen is also apparent (arrow).
Figure 2Transverse CT image of the cervical spine at the level of C3–C4 (Case 1). Mineral-attenuating material is apparent in the left intervertebral foramen (arrow). There is also mineralization of the nucleus pulposus that remains in situ.