| Literature DB >> 32450859 |
Rocio Orlandi1, Rodrigo Gutierrez-Quintana2, Beatrice Carletti3, Camilla Cooper3, Josep Brocal4, Sara Silva2, Rita Gonçalves3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vestibular dysfunction is relatively common in dogs, with a prevalence of 0.08% reported in primary veterinary care in the UK. There are several studies investigating how to differentiate between peripheral and central vestibular disease but only limited information regarding the possible underlying causes for peripheral vestibular dysfunction in dogs. This study therefore aimed to describe the clinical signs, magnetic resonance imaging findings (MRI), underlying causes and outcome in a large population of dogs diagnosed with peripheral vestibular disease.Entities:
Keywords: Idiopathic vestibular disease; MRI; Otitis media/interna; Outcome; Peripheral vestibular disease
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32450859 PMCID: PMC7249679 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-020-02366-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Fig. 1Transverse post-contrast T1-weighted thin-sliced MR images of the caudal brainstem of a dog with a right-sided facial nerve enhancement (arrow); b left-sided vestibulocochlear nerve enhancement (arrow) and c and d left-sided simultaneous facial and vestibulocochlear nerves enhancement (arrows)
Cranial nerve enhancement identified on magnetic resonance imaging
| Facial nerve ( | Vestibulocochlear nerve ( | Facial and vestibulocochlear nerves ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Idiopathic vestibular syndrome ( | |||
| Otitis media/interna ( | |||
| Hypothyroidism ( | |||
| Neoplasia ( |
Fig. 2Transverse T2-weighted (a), T1-weighted (b) and post-contrast T1-weighted (c) and volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination (VIBE - d) MR images of a dog with bilateral otitis media and externa, right-sided otitis interna and mild meningeal and vestibulocochlear nerve contrast enhancement on the right side (arrows), adjacent to the tympanic bulla
Fig. 3Transverse T2-weighted (a), Fluid-Attenuated Inversion Recovery (FLAIR - b) T1-weighted post-contrast (c) and T1 High Resolution Isotropic Volume Excitation (THRIVE – d) MR images of a dog with otitis interna in the absence of obvious otitis media. There is no suppression of the fluid in the right inner ear (b), which is contrast enhancing (c and d) (arrows)
Clinical and outcome information for dogs diagnosed with idiopathic vestibular syndrome
| Total number of dogs ( | |
|---|---|
| Age | Median 84.5 months (range 15–175) |
| Sex | Male Female |
| Onset of clinical signs | Acute Chronic |
| Progression of clinical signs | Progressive n = 21/122 (17%) Non-progressive Waxing/waning |
| Neurological abnormalities on examination | Head tilt Nystagmus Ataxia Facial paralysis Positional strabismus Horner syndrome |
| MRI findings | No abnormalities CN VII enhancement CN VIII enhancement CN VII and VIII enhancement |
| CSF abnormalities | Mild pleocytosis Albuminocytological dissociation = 4/81 (5%) |
| Outcome information | Complete recovery Persistence of clinical signs Facial paralysis Head tilt Ataxia |
| Recurrence of clinical signs | Recurrence No recurrence |