Diseases of the cervical spine Flashcards

1
Q

What anatomy is involved?

A

7 cervical vertebrae
C1 - atlas
C2 - axis

C6 and C7 is where most degenerative disease is located

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2
Q

How many articulations are there on each vertebrae?

A

3
- left and right articular process joints (facet joint)
- intervertebral joints

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3
Q

What structures are highlighted by the circle and arrows?

A

Circle - intervertebral foramen
Arrows - spinal cord

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4
Q

What are the 3 main manifestations of cervical disease?

A
  • Neck pain/dysfunction
  • Forelimb lameness
  • Ataxia – cervical stenotic myelopathy
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5
Q

What clinical signs are suggestive of neck pain?

A
  • Reduced range of motion during baited stretches
  • Changes in position or posture
  • Palpation findings – enlarged joints
  • Reduction in muscle mass
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6
Q

How can neck pain cause forelimb lameness?

A

Classicaly an outside limb lameness - ‘hopping’ type

Two main mechanisms at play here:

A consequence of muscle dysfunction
* Many cervical muscles are involved in protraction of the forelimb
* Brachiocephalicus – changes in strength or function can cause asymmetry

Radiculopathy – neuropathic pain
* Compression of a spinal nerve root in the caudal cervical region (feeding brachial plexus)
* Enlarged APJs are the culprit

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7
Q

What are the arrows pointing to?

A

Progressive radiculopathy
1 - normal
2 - moderate
3 - severe
Occlusion of the intervertebral foramen and impingement of the spinal nerve root

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8
Q

What advanced imaging can we use to investigate diseases of the cervical spine?

A

CT is the only 3D imaging modality that can accommodate the equine neck!

Requirements:
* Large bore CT scanner
* General anaesthesia
* Often combined with myelography (injecting radiocontrast into the CSF)

VASTLY improves diagnostic accuracy, but we have to take care not to over-interpret findings!

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9
Q

What does the CT myelography image show?

A
  • New bone forming on lateral aspect of right articular process
  • Lipping and osteophytes on both sides of the articular process joints
  • New bone formation in the sclerosis of both sides of the articular process joints
  • Spinal cord involvement
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10
Q

How would you manage diseases of the cervical spine?

A

Intra-articular medication with corticosteroids is the mainstay
* Cannot reverse bone remodeling but can alleviate pain and reduce associated soft tissue inflammation
* There are no landmarks on the surface, and the target is deep beneath muscle…
* Injections are performed under ultrasound guidance.

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11
Q

What is the prognosis with diseases of the cervical spine?

A
  • Prognosis is variable and often unpredictable…
  • Perhaps because advance imaging isn’t available for all cases!
  • Horses with neck pain will do better than horses with radiculopathies who will do better than horses with spinal ataxia
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