Tesis
Contribuições no diagnóstico e no tratamento cirúrgico de cães com doença do disco intervertebral cervical
Fecha
2019-02-28Autor
Schwab, Marcelo Luís
Institución
Resumen
To identify compression in the spinal cord of dogs with cervical intervertebral disc disease
(DDIV) it is necessary to use advanced imaging tests such as myelography. However, in this
segment, little is known about the importance and necessity of performing different
myelographic views, which are already well established for the thoracolumbar region. In
addition, when lateral compression is identified in the exam, surgical decompression by the
hemilaminectomy technique is indicated. However, no studies were found demonstrating the
inefficacy of the ventral slot technique in these cases. Thus, the aims of this study was to verify
in which of the myelographic views was possible to identify spinal cord compression in dogs
with cervical intervertebral disc disease (IVDD), to establish a sequence in which myelographic
views should be obtained for this region and to verify the clinical recovery of dogs submitted
to ventral slot surgical decompression in lateralized compressions of the cervical spinal cord
caused by intervertebral disc disease (IVDD). For the first study four myelographic views
(lateral, ventrodorsal, left oblique and right oblique) of 41 patients diagnosed with cervical
IVDD were evaluated. In 40 patients (97.5%) it was possible to identify spinal cord
compression by lateral view, 22 (53.6%) by the oblique view, and 11 (26.8%) by the
ventrodorsal view (p<0.0001). There were lateralized compressions in 22 (53.6%) patients,
detected by all oblique views (100%) and by 11 (50%) of the ventrodorsal views. In 10 (24,4%)
dogs, it was observed more than one compression site, which ventrodorsal view helped to
decide the site in 50% of the cases and oblique in 70%. For the second study twenty patients
were selected in different degrees of neurological dysfunction with definitive diagnosis of
lateralized compression by cervical IVDD. Postoperative clinical recovery was assessed in
patients who had undergone at least two months of the surgical procedure. There was a
satisfactory recovery in 19 dogs (95%) and unsatisfactory recovery in another (5%), showing a
significant clinical improvement (p <0.05) in the use of this technique in lateralized
compression cases. From this it can be concluded that all the tested myelographic views allow
the identification of spinal cord compressions in dogs with cervical IVDD, the lateral view
being the most relevant, followed by the oblique and ventrodorsal view, therefore establishing
a sequence of myelographic views should be obtained for this region; and that the ventral slot
promotes satisfactory clinical recovery of dogs with lateralized compression of the spinal cord
caused by cervical.