| Literature DB >> 27267355 |
Barbara Thomsen1, Laurent Garosi2, Geoff Skerritt3, Clare Rusbridge4,5,6, Tim Sparrow4, Mette Berendt7, Hanne Gredal7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In dogs with ischaemic stroke, a very common site of infarction is the cerebellum. The aim of this study was to characterise neurological signs in relation to infarct topography in dogs with suspected cerebellar ischaemic stroke and to report short-term outcome confined to the hospitalisation period. A retrospective multicentre study of dogs with suspected cerebellar ischaemic stroke examined from 2010-2015 at five veterinary referral hospitals was performed. Findings from clinical, neurological, and paraclinical investigations including magnetic resonance imaging were assessed.Entities:
Keywords: Canine; Cerebellum; Cerebrovascular accident; Infarct; Ischemic; Occlusion; Rostral cerebellar artery; Syndrome; Vestibular
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27267355 PMCID: PMC4897939 DOI: 10.1186/s13028-016-0219-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Neurological signs in relation extensive vs. limited occlusion of the rostral cerebellar artery in 23 dogs with cerebellar ischaemic stroke
| Neurological signs | Extensive RCeA | Limited RCeA |
|---|---|---|
| Mentation ( | ||
| Obtunded ( | 2 | |
| Depressed ( | 1 | |
| Posture and body position | ||
| Head tilt ( | ||
| Contralateral ( | 3 | 9 |
| Unclassified ( | 1 | |
| Tremors ( | ||
| Intention tremors of head ( | 1 | 1 |
| Unclassified ( | 1 | |
| Increased tone of limbs ( | ||
| Ipsilateral ( | 1 | |
| Thoracic limbs ( | 1 | |
| Decerebellate posture ( | 1 | |
| Opisthotonus ( | 1 | |
| Torticollis, contralateral ( | 1 | |
| Gait abnormalities | ||
| Ataxia ( | ||
| Ataxia with hypermetria ( | 1 | 10 |
| Ataxia without hypermetria ( | 1 | 3 |
| Non-ambulatory ( | 2 | 4 |
| Paresis ( | ||
| Non-ambulatory tetraparesis ( | 1 | |
| Cranial nerve deficits | ||
| Decreased menace response ( | ||
| Ipsilateral ( | 5 | |
| Bilateral ( | 1 | 1 |
| Anisocoria ( | ||
| Contralateral mydriasis ( | 1 | 1 |
| Miosis ( | 1 | |
| Nystagmus, positional ( | ||
| Vertical ( | 1 | 3 |
| Horizontal ( | 1 | 1 |
| Rotatory ( | 1 | 1 |
| Strabismus ( | ||
| Positional ( | 2 | |
| Spontaneous ( | 1 | |
| Postural reaction deficits other than proprioceptive deficits ( | ||
| Ipsilateral ( | 5 | |
| Bilateral ( | 1 | |
| Unclassified ( | 1 | |
| Proprioceptive deficits ( | ||
| Ipsilateral ( | 2 | |
| Contralateral ( | 1 | |
| Pelvic limbs ( | 1 | |
| Unclassified ( | 1 | |
| Other signs | ||
| Signs of nausea ( | ||
| Vomiting ( | 1 | 1 |
| Salivating ( | 2 | |
RCeA rostral cerebellar artery. Occlusions were classified as extensive when affecting the entire vascular territory of the rostral cerebellar artery (RCeA) and as limited when affecting a smaller cortical part of the vascular territory of either the RCeA or a perforating artery
Fig. 1Territorial infarct classified as limited. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from a 10-year-old female neutered Lurcher with an acute right-sided rostral cerebellar artery territorial infarct. Arrows indicate the cerebellar region affected by the ischaemic stroke. a Transverse plane T1-weighted (T1W) at the level of the rostral cerebellum, b transverse plane T2-weighted (T2W) at the level of the rostral cerebellum, c mid sagittal plane T1W, d mid sagittal plane T2W
Images obtained by a 1.5T MRI unit (MAGNETOM Symphony, Siemens Healthcare)
Fig. 2Lacunar infarct classified as limited. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of an 8-year-old female neutered labrador retriever obtained within 48 h after onset of neurological deficits. Arrows indicate the cerebellar region affected by the ischaemic stroke. a Transverse plane T1-weighted at the level of the rostral cerebellum, b transverse plane T2-weighted at the level of the rostral cerebellum
Images obtained by a 0.4T MRI unit (Aperto Permanent Magnet, Hitachi)
Fig. 3Territorial infarct classified as extensive. Sequential brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from a 9-year-old female neutered English cocker spaniel with an acute right-sided rostral cerebellar artery territorial infarct. Direction of images: rostral to caudal. First row: transverse plane T1-weighted images. Second row: transverse plane T2-weighted images. Arrows indicate the cerebellar region affected by the ischaemic stroke
Images obtained by a 0.4 T MRI unit (Aperto Permanent Magnet, Hitachi)
Fig. 4Territorial infarct classified as limited. Sequential brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from an 11-year-old female neutered mixed-breed with an acute left-sided rostral cerebellar artery territorial infarct. Direction of images: rostral to caudal. First row: transverse plane T1-weighted images. Second row: transverse plane T2-weighted images. Arrows indicate the cerebellar region affected by the ischaemic stroke
Images obtained by a 0.4T MRI unit (Aperto Permanent Magnet, Hitachi)