Summary
Objective: To identify the severity of neurological deficits, presence of signs of cervical
pain, and the site of intervertebral disc space extrusion in 21 dogs diagnosed via
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with a hydrated nucleus pulposus extrusion (HNPE)
and compare those findings to dogs with other compressive cervical myelopathies.
Methods: Medical records and MRI findings were reviewed in dogs that were presented to two
veterinary hospitals between 2006 and 2012 and subsequently diagnosed by MRI to have
a HNPE (n = 21) or other compressive cervical myelopathies originating from the intervertebral
disc (n = 174). Information obtained included signalment, severity of neurological
deficits, presence of signs of neck pain, and site of HNPE. The severity of clinical
neurological spinal cord dysfunction was determined for each dog in both groups using
the Frankel scoring system (0–4). The MRI were reviewed for confirmation of diagnosis
and site of HNPE. An ANOVA was used to compare age between groups and a Mann-Whitney
test for pairwise comparisons of the Frankel score between groups. Values of p <0.05
were considered statistically significant.
Results: Significantly more severe Frankel scores and less severe signs of cervical pain detected
on palpation were observed in dogs with a HNPE as compared to dogs with other compressive
myelopathies. The sites of HNPE were C3-C4 (8/21), C4-C5 (12/21), and C5-C6 (1/21).
Clinical significance: Dogs affected with HNPE have more severe clinical neurological deficits and less
severe signs of cervical pain as compared to dogs with other compressive cervical
myelopathies.
Keywords
Cervical - IVDD - intervertebral disc disease - HNPE - hydrated nucleus pulposus extrusion
- discal - cyst