SA Neuro Flashcards

1
Q

Limitations of MRI?

A

Many diseases have normal MRI
Anatomical imaging often lacks specificity - e.g. infiltrative neoplasia and lymphoma may look identical to inflammatory disease
High cost
Limited availability

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2
Q

Indications for aural radiography? View used? Limitations?

A

Chronic otitis
Peripheral vestibular disease
Facial nerve paralysis
Horner’s syndrome

Rostral-caudal (open mouth)

GA required
Often limited value in large dogs
CT preferred in available

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3
Q

Principles of CT?

A
X ray
Contrast based on physical density
Cross sectional
No superimposition
Better ST contrast (not as good as MRI)
Excellent for bone
For brain CT need to give iodinated contrast in most cases (potentially nephrotoxic)
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4
Q

MRI principles?

A

Imaging net magnetic vectors of spins of hydrogen protons
Strong magnetic field with varying gradients
Apply RF pulses at Lamour frequency
Turn off RF pulse
Spins rephrase and lose energy emitting RF signal

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5
Q

MRI safety?

A

Magnet extremely strong - need to be careful when taking objects into room, act as projectiles (can be fatal)
Acoustic damage - ear plugs and defenders for patients
Patient temperature:
- SAR effects: patient heating
- prolonged GA: patient cooling

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6
Q

What are the MRI contrasts?

A

T2W: fluid and fat are hyperintense (bright)
T1W: fluid is hypointense (dark, depends on protein content), fat is hyperintense
T2 FLAIR: fluid is hypointense, fat is hyperintense
STIR: fluid is hyperintense, fat is hypointense

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7
Q

Which MRI sequence to use?

A

T2W sequences most sensitive
If T2W normal consider additional sequences
STIR screening for pathology
T2* GRE bone lesions and haemorrhage

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8
Q

What to assess on MRI of the brain (T2W sequence)?

A
Look for abnormal signal intensity
Symmetry on transverse and dorsal plane images
Mass effect or atrophy
Grey/white matter contrast
Ventricles - size, shape
Enhancement pattern
Assess extracranial soft tissues
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9
Q

What is myelography? When is it used? Contraindications?

A

Injection of non-ionic low osmolar iodinated positive contrast (iohexol) into subarachnoid space
Outline surface of spinal cord on radiographs or CT - highlights extradural or bony lesions
Always take CSF first
Used to:
- localise spinal lesions
- surgical planning
- rule out surgical disease
- assessment of dynamic spinal cord lesions
Contraindications:
- coagulopathy
- spinal instability
- cloudy/turbid CCSF (suggests inflammatory process)

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10
Q

Complications of myelography?

A
Exacerbation of neurological signs
Seizures
Brainstem injection
Central canalogram
Spinal cord haematoma
Epidurogram
Rapid movement of contrast
Subdural injection
Infection
Dysrhythmias 
Death
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11
Q

What to assess on spinal images?

A
Roentgen signs - shape, size etc
Alignment
Disk spaces
Endplates
Foraminal changes
Facets
Soft tissues
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12
Q

What incidental findings could there be with spinal images?

A

Spondylosis deformans (very rarely clinically significant)
Facet OA
Congenital anomalies common

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13
Q

What are the main alignment problems of the spine seen by imaging?

A

Atlanto-axial subluxation
Congenital malformations (e.g. hemivertebra causing kyphosis or compressive myelopathy)
Trauma
“Wobbler” - Dobermans and larger breeds

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14
Q

What is the most common cause of extradural compression? Other causes?

A

(Extradural is most common form of compression)
Disk herniation

Others:

  • vertebral tumour
  • superiosteal haemorrhage
  • extradural cysts
  • vertebral stenosis
  • disk extrusion
  • disk protrusion
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15
Q

How does intervertebral disk disease (IVDD) appear on imaging? Pitfall with radiography?

A

Narrowed disk space
Reduced size of foramina
Endplate changes (chronic)
Mineralised material in vertebral canal

Pitfall with radiography = artifactual narrowing further away from centre of beam

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16
Q

Differentials for destructive changes of spine seen on imaging?

A

Diskospondylitis - centred on disk space

Neoplasia - may see changes if involve bone

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17
Q

Which imaging is needed for intramedullary disease?

A

Not visible on radiographs and poorly seen on CT
MRI required in most cases
History and CSF often important for diagnosis

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18
Q

Causes of intramedullary disease?

A
Neoplasia
Myelitis
Ischaemic myelopathy
Syrinx
Contusion
Haemorrhage
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19
Q

Causes of intradural-extramedullary disease?

A

Subarachnoid diverticulae/cyst

Masses - meningioma, peripheral nerve sheath tumour

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20
Q

What are the 3 localisations of spinal disease?

A

Intramedullary
Intradural-extramedullary
Extradural

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21
Q

Tests to rule out non neurological diseases causing neurological signs?

A

Haematology and biochemistry
Electrolytes
Liver function testing - e.g. for PSS (BAST, ammonia)
Endocrine function tests (hypothyroidism, addison’s, cushings, diabetes)
Clotting function - stroke
Anti-gluten antibodies (anti-gladin IgG, anti-transglutaminase 2 IgA)
Immune mediated disease - acute phase proteins, specific autoantibodies
Infectious diseases (quite uncommon with neurological signs in UK) - Toxoplasma, Neospora
Urinalysis - renal disease, electrolyte abnormalities, hypertension (PLN), UTI
Bacteriology

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22
Q

Why is urinalysis important for patients with paraparesis/urine dysfunction?

A

Increased risk of UTIs

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23
Q

What infectious CNS conditions could be find by bacteriology?

A
Encephalitis - penetrating cranial injuries (cats), extension from otitis media/interna
Bacterial meningitis (CSF degenerative neutrophils)
Empyema, paraspinal abscessation
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24
Q

Significance of bridging spondylosis below vertebrae?

A

Often doesn’t cause neurological signs as not affecting vertebral canal
May cause pain due to impingement on nerves

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25
Q

How do extradural, intradural-extramedullary and intramedullary lesions appear with myelography?

A

Extradural:
- axial displacement of 1 or more contrast columns
- columns often thin or partially disrupted at the site of the
lesion
- most common
Intradural- extramedullary
- filling defect within the contrast column
- ‘Golf tee’ sign or widening of subarachnoid space due to a arachnoid diverticulum
Intramedullary
- divergence of contrast columns

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26
Q

What is CSF analysis useful for? Limitations? Contraindications?

A

Most useful for infectious/inflammatory conditions
Can be abnormal in neoplastic or traumatic conditions
Limitations:
- may not be abnormal due to location (if parenchymal) or nature of the lesion (non exfoliating)
- can have non specific changes
- cell counts correlate with exfoliation into CSF not severity of disease
Contraindications:
- increased intracranial pressure (mental status, pupil size and PLR, abnormal postures, vestibular eye movement)
- coagulopathy
- cervical collection contraindicated in some conditions (Chiara-Like malformation, AA instability, cervical trauma)

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27
Q

How to take a CSF sample? Needle? Site? Volume? Analysis?

A

Spinal needle
Site caudal to lesion:
- cerebellomedullary cistern: easier, blood contamination less likely, greater risk
- lumbar cistern: L6-L7 (L5-L6 in larger dogs if none obtained), can be more challenging to obtain
Do not aspirate
Max volume 1ml/5kg
Analyse within 1 hour - differential count, cytology, protein, infectious disease testing

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28
Q

Normal analysis of CSF?

A

Clear
No RBCs, WBCs <6
Cervical protein <30
Lumbar protein <45

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29
Q

How does blood contamination affect CSF analysis?

A

Falsely increases WBC count by 1 per 500 RBC

Falsely increases protein by 1 per 1000 RBC

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30
Q

What is albuminocytological dissociation of CSF? What does it indicate?

A

= increased protein without increased WBC
Non specific
Extradural compression (disc disease), neoplasia, infection, vasculitis, trauma, springomyelia, degenerative myelopathy

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31
Q

What is pleocytosis of CSF? What could cause neutrophilic and mononuclear pleocytosis? Mixed? Eusinophilic?

A
Increased WBCs
Neutrophilic pleocytosis:
- SRMA
- bacterial (intracellular)
- GME/NE
- fungal
- FIP
- post myelography, haemorrhage, trauma, neoplasia
Mononuclear pleocytosis:
- GME/NE
- CNS lymphoma
- viral (CDV)
- bacterial and SRMA (chronic)
Mixed pleocytosis:
- GME
- bacterial and SRMA (chronic)
- fungal
- protozoal
- non inflammatory disease (infarct)
Eosinophilic:
- eosinophilic ME
- fungal
- protozoal
- parasitic
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32
Q

What can Pilocarpine be used to test?

A
Functional test of autonomic NS
0.1% topical administration to the cornea -> miosis
Rapid constriction (<30mins) suggestive of denervation hypersensitivty
Supportive finding of dysautonomia (definitive diagnosis requires PME)
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33
Q

What is the Edrophonium response test?

A

Functional test
“Tension test”
For junctionopathies - acquired and some congenital myasthenia gravis
IV administration of edrophonium chloride (fast acting cholinesterase inhibitor)
Care for cholinergic crisis:
- bradycardia
- salivation
- miosis
- dyspnoea
- tremors
(Have incubation kit on stand by and atropine drawn up)

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34
Q

What are electrodiagnostics useful for?

A

Identifying denervated muscles
Extent and severity
Treatment monitoring

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35
Q

What can be seen with electromyography?

A

Normal muscle silent except in end-plate region
Spontaneous activity is abnormal
10-14 days to be apparent

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36
Q

What is motor nerve conduction velocity used for? How is it done?

A

Investigate suspected peripheral neuropathies
Stimulate a motor nerve at a minimum of 2 sites and record the
evoked electrical activity (CMAP)
Patient age and limb temperature should be taken into account

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37
Q

What are F-waves used for?

A

Assess the nerve roots

F wave latency or F ratio (polyradiculoneuritis)

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38
Q

What is repetitive nerve stimulation used for?

A

Assess neuromuscular junction
High repetition rate (3-5 per second)
Myasthenia gravis - consistent 10% decrease or more in the CMAP

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39
Q

What is electroencephalography (EEG) used for?

A

Assess forebrain activity
Identification of seizure activity (when used at the time of the
seizure)
Can be useful in status epilepticus

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40
Q

What does the brainstem auditory evoked response (BAER) screen for?

A

Congenital sensorineural deafness
Localise acquired deafness
Access hearing threshold

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41
Q

What type of problems are most likely with focal and lateralised, multifocal and diffuse and symmetrical brain lesions?

A

Focal and lateralised - neoplasia, vascular
Multifocal - inflammatory/infectious
Diffuse and symmetrical - metabolic, toxic

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42
Q

What controls the rate of blood flow through the brain? What is this controlled by?

A

Rate of blood flow is controlled mainly by CPP (cerebral perfusion pressure)
CPP is controlled by MABP and ICP
CPP = MABP - ICP

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43
Q

Compensatory mechanism of the ICP of the brain? What happens if exceeded?

A

If one component of the brain (tissue, blood, CSF) increases, another has to decreases
= Compliance
Once limit exceeded, ICP can rise precipitously -> brain herniation:
- forebrain herniates underneath tentorium
- or cerebellum herniates through foramen magnum

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44
Q

Signs of raised ICP?

A

Mental status - depression, stupor, coma
Cushing’s reflex:
- bradycardia and hypertension
- ICP increases above MAP resulting in cerebral ischaemia
- a1 adrenergic sympathetic activation -> systemic vasoconstriction -> hypertension
- carotid artery baroreceptors detect hypertension -> vagal activation -> bradycardia
Pupils:
- PLR
- aniscoria
- miosis
- mydriasis (worst sign)
Reduced physiological nystagmus (early sign of raised ICP)
Abnormal postures - decerebrate (seen with cerebrum herniation), decerebellate (seen with cerebellar herniation)

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45
Q

Differentials for raised ICP?

A

V: CVA - ischaemic or haemorrhagic strokes
I: MUOs, bacterial ME, protozoal MEs, viral MEs (CDV, FIP, FIV)
T: head trauma, toxins
A: hydrocephalus, lisencephaly, hydranencephaly and porencephaly, CCA
M: hepatic encephalopathy, hypoglycaemia, electrolyte imbalances
I
N: meningiomas, gliomas, pituitary tumours, lymphoma, metastases, MPNS T
D: lysosomal storage diseases, cognitive dysfunction, many degenerative GM and WM disorders

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46
Q

What types of meningoencephalitis are there? How do they present? Diagnosis?

A

GME (granulomatous
NME (necrotising)
NLE (necrotising leukoencephalitis
Usually acute and progressive, often multifocal
Diagnosis - advanced imaging, CSF analysis, sometimes biopsy

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47
Q

What is idiopathic tremor syndrome? Signs? Diagnosis? Treatment? Prognosis?

A
Mostly small breed dogs 
Fine tremor - rapid, low amplitude, worse with stress/excitement
\+/- head tilt, reduced menace, ataxia
Diagnosis:
- CSF: very mildly inflammatory
- +/- MRI to rule out other problems
- no other condition causes this type of tremor
Treatment:
- corticosteroids for 4-6m
- +/- other immunosuppressive drugs
- diazepam initially
Fair-good prognosis but possibility of relapse
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48
Q

What are the 3 main routes of infection for Bacterial ME? Signs? Diagnosis? Treatment? Prognosis?

A

3 main routes = haematogenous, direct invasion (inner ear, eyes, nasal sinuses or bone infection, trauma), CSF
Signs:
- usually acute CNS signs
- obtundation and CN deficits most common signs
- pyrexia
- neck pain
Diagnosis:
- CSF: increased protein concentration and pleocytosis (rare phagocytksed organisms)
- CSF/blood culture (positive 30%): inside abscess or in small amounts
Treatment = antibiotics +/- surgical drainage
Guarded prognosis

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49
Q

Clinical signs of CNS intoxications? Possible causes?

A

Acute (<24h) onset
Seizures (approx 40% of all reactive seizures)
Often GI, CV or resp signs before or at same time
Muscle tremors and fasciculations often seen
Status epilepticus (SE) common - infusions usually needed to control seizures
Toxins:
- organophosphates
- pyrethrin
- lead
- avermectins
- medications
- etc

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50
Q

Difference between primary and secondary head trauma?

A
Primary injury:
- physical disruption of parenchyma: concussion, contusion, laceration
- no intervention possible
Secondary injury:
- release of inflammatory mediators
- continued haemorrhage
- leads to increased ICP
- can intervene
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51
Q

Assessment of head trauma? When is surgery needed?

A

Modified Glascow Coma Scale (useful for serial monitoring, high score is better prognosis)
Imaging: MRI or CT (need for decompressive surgery)
Surgery if fractures compressing brain parenchyma or contaminated fragments, haematomas or severe raised ICP

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52
Q

Medical management of head trauma?

A

Fluids
- restore IV volume to ensure adequate CPP
- hypotension significantly increases mortality
- resuscitation then maintenance
- isotonic or hypertonic crystalloids, colloids and blood products
- avoid glucose as hyperglycaemia associated with poorer outcome
ICP management
- Mannitol: reduces blood viscosity, increases CBF an oxygen delivery, free radical scavenger, osmotic effect, contraindicated in hypovolaemia, can become refractory
- hypertonic saline: contraindicated if hyponatraemia or cardiac/respiratory disease
Oxygen
- establish clear airway
- essential for brain (high CO2 increases CBF)
Temperature
- avoid hyperthermia (affects metabolic rate) and hypothermia (shivering oxygen demands)
BP:
- maintain between 90-140mmHg
- cerebral blood flow is affected outside this range
- avoid hypotension to maintain CPP
Pain
- pain increases BP and therefore ICP
- caution as morphine may cause emesis and result in increased ICP
General care
- keep head elevated
- avoid jugular compression
- turn every 4-6h
- catheterise bladder every 6h
- nutritional support

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53
Q

Are steroids good for head trauma?

A

No
Associated with hyperglycaemia and production of lactic acid -> cell death
Increased risk of infection
Affects metabolism

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54
Q

What is hydrocephalus? Which breeds and age usually? Signs?

A
= Abnormal dilation of ventricular system within cranium
Toy breeds, young age
Signs:
- domed shaped head
- persistent fontanelle
- abnormal behaviour
- cognitive dysfunction
- obtundation
- circling/pacing
- seizures(?)
- vestibular signs
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55
Q

What are corpus callus anomalies? Signs? Which breeds?

A
Corpus callous = white matter that connects cortex of one hemisphere with the other
Anomalies = hypogenesis, agenesis
Signs:
- adipsia associated with hypernatremia
- seizures
- abnormal behaviour
- tremors
- circling
Min Schnauzer, SBT
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56
Q

What are arachnoid diverticulae?

A

Prevalence of supracollicular fluid accumulations

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57
Q

What are hydranencephaly and porencephaly? Signs?

A

= presence of cerebral cavities, usually communicating with subarachnoid space and/or lateral ventricles
Signs in first few months (circling, abnormal behaviour) or up to years (seizures_

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58
Q

Most common cause of hepatic encephalopathy? Pathogenesis?

A
Most common cause = secondary to PSS
Pathogenesis:
- hyperammonaemia
- neuroinflammation
- deranged neurotransmission
- cerebral oedema
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59
Q

Signs of hepatic encephalopathy?

A

Vague signs - failure to thrive, weight loss, PUPD, GI signs
Forebrain signs - behaviour changes, pacing, blindness, seizures
Rare brainstem or cerebellar signs in older dogs
Neuro signs may develop after surgery

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60
Q

Diagnosis and treatment of hepatic encephalopathy?

A

Diagnosis - BAST, fasting ammonia, US, CT angiography
Treatment:
- lactulose: traps ammonia in intestine, decreases absorption, inhibits uptake of glutamine by intestinal wall
- antibiotics: reduce ammonia producing bacteria in gut
- diet: reduce gut derived ammonia, low protein, aromatic amino acids and short chain fatty acids
- minimise factors causing increased ammonia (constipation, GI bleeding, azotaemia, infection, hypokalaemia)
- minimise factors causing reduced toxin clearance (dehydration, hypotension, anaemia)
- reduce factors affecting neurotransmission (benzodiazepines)
- seizure control: levetiracetam first choice

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61
Q

What is the primary source of energy for the brain?

A

Glucose oxidation
Brain consumes 25% of total blood glucose
Brain has 3x metabolic rate of peripheral tissues but 10-30% less extracellular glucose
Lack of glycogen ctores

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62
Q

Underlying causes of hypoglycaemia?

A
Insulinoma
Liver disease
Insulin overdose
Glycogen storage diseases
Juvenile hypoglycaemia
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63
Q

Clinical signs and diagnosis of hypoglycaemia?

A
Clinical signs:
- lethargy, ravenous appetite, anxiety
- depression
- weakness and tremors
- reduced vision
- seizures
Diagnosis:
- low glucose levels (typically <3mmol/l)
- clinical signs
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64
Q

Causes of hypernatraemia?

A

Excess water loss (e.g. diabetes insipidus, osmotic diuresis, diarrhoea)
Excess salt intake (e.g. salt poisoning, administration of IV hypertonic solutions, hyperadrenocorticism)
Insufficient water intake (e.g., lack of access, inability to drink or CNS disease resulting in primary adipsia)

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65
Q

Causes of hyponatraemia?

A

Hypovolemic (e.g., renal and GI disease, third space or cutaneous losses)
Hypervolemic (e.g. congestive heart failure, liver failure, nephrotic syndrome, hypoalbuminemic states)
Normovolemic (e.g., primary polydipsia, water intoxication, hypothyroidism, adrenal insufficiency or renal failure

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66
Q

Signs of sodium derangements?

A
Altered mentation
Blindness
Seizures
Coma
Death
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67
Q

What happens with chronic Na abnormalities? What happens with rapid correction?

A

In chronic Na abnormalities, there is active movement of electrolytes (Na, K and Cl) followed by “idiogenic osmoles”
With rapid correction, the compensatory influx of electrolytes is not matched by the slower moving organic osmolytes

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68
Q

Signs of hypocalcaemia?

A

Excitability due to increased neuronal permeability to Na -> nerve fibre discharges spontaneously -> muscle contraction and tetany
Muscle spasm, cramping, muscle twitching, trembling, stiffness, tonic-clonic spasms, episodic rigidity, tetraparesis, seizures

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69
Q

Types of brain neoplasia?

A

Primary:
- intra-axial: gliomas
- extra-axial: meningiomas, choroid plexus tumours
Secondary:
- metastases e.g. haemangiosarcoma
- direct extension of neoplasia outside brain e.g. nasal tumours, pituitary macro adenoma

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70
Q

Most common clinical signs of brain neoplasia? Which animals? Treatment?

A

More common in older and larger breed dogs
Most common signs:
- seizures in suratentorial tumours
- central vestibular dysfunction in infratentorial tumours
Treatment:
- less sedative AEDs
- anti-inflammatory doses of prednisolone
- analgesia: paracetamol, gabapentin

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71
Q

What degenerative disorders of the brain are there?

A

Storage diseases - defect of a lysosomal hydrolase enzyme
Accumulation and storage of substrate(s) within the cytoplasm of neurons - early onset, diffuse neurological dysfunction, progessive course leading to death
Cognitive dysfunction

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72
Q

Signs of cognitive dysfunction? Why does it happen? Treatment?

A
Changes in behaviour, memory and learning ability:
- disturbances in sleeping
- staring into space
- getting stuck in corners
- loss of house training
- pacing or vocalising at night
- newly developed behaviour problems
Due to:
- accumulation of beta-amyloid with senile plaque formation and neurofibrillary tangles
Treatment:
- selegiline
- nutritional supplementation with antioxidants and other brain protective compounds
- behaviour modification
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73
Q

What makes up the vestibular system?

A

Peripheral:
- 3 semicircular ducts at right angles to each other, rotation of head makes endolymph flow
- vestibulocochlear nerve (CN8) in connection with hair cells of each receptor, movement of endolymph causes bending of hair cells
Central:
- brainstem: 4 nuclei receive information from nerve and pass to brain and spinal cord
- cerebellum: inhibits vestibular nuclei

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74
Q

Clinical signs of vestibular disease?

A
Ispilateral head tilt
Head sway if affecting both sides
Ataxia and wide based stance
Leaning and falling
Less commonly tight circling
Nystagmus
- horizontal, rotatory or vertical
- lesion on side of slower phase
- vertical suggests central
- may be positional
Positional strabismus
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75
Q

When is a paradoxical head tilt seen?

A

= contralateral head tilt
Lesion of flocculonodular lobe or caudal cerebellar peduncle
Have other cerebellar signs
Cerebllum inhibits ipsilateral vestibular nuclei -> disinhibition:
- inhibition of ipsilateral extensors
- facilitation of contralateral extensors

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76
Q

What is convergence-related nystagmus?

A

Seen with small dorsal midbrain lesions - mostly infarcts

Irregular, jerky nystagmus in which both eyeballs rhythmically converge and retract into orbit

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77
Q

Which is opsoclonus nystagmus?

A

Seen with cerebellar disease

Bursts of rapid multidirectional eye movements without an interval between saccades

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78
Q

How to differentiate between central and peripheral vestibular disease?

A

Central - paresis possible, proprioceptive deficits possible, mentation may be affected, may be CNV-XII deficits, Horner’s rare, nystagmus can be vertical, horizontal or rotatory and may change direction
Peripheral - no paresis, no proprioceptive deficits, alert mentation, may be VII CN deficit, Horner’s possible, nystagmus is horizontal or rotatory, fast phase away from lesion

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79
Q

Causes of central vestibular disease?

A
V: cerebrovascular disease
I: MUEs, FIP
T: head trauma, metronidazole
A: brain malformation
M: hypothyroidism
I
N: brain tumours, thiamine deficiency
D: lysosomal storage diseases, degenerative diseases
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80
Q

Causes of peripheral vestibular disease?

A
V
I: otitis media/interna
T: trauma to middle/inner ear, ototoxic drugs
A: congenital vestibular disease
M: hypothyroidism
N: middle ear tumours
D
81
Q

Which vestibular diseases are acute?

A

Idiopathic vestibular disease
Cerebrovascular disease
Head trauma
Trauma to middle/inner ear

Acute or chronic:
Hypothyroidism
Metronidazole
Ototoxic drugs

82
Q

What cerebrovascular diseases are there?

A

= abnormality of brain caused by disruption of blood supply
Strokes - ischaemic (arterial or venous obstruction) or haemorrhagic (rupture of blood vessel)
Infarct - area of necrotic tissue resulting from ischaemia

83
Q

Signs of cerebrovascular disease (e.g. stroke)? Appearance on MRI?

A

Clinical signs vary but acute and non- progressive
Signs of central vestibular disease
MRI:
- well-defined, sharply demarcated lesions with minimal to no mass effect
- limited to vascular territory of a main cerebral or perforating artery
- hyperintense on T2WI and FLAIR

84
Q

What concurrent medical conditions can cause cerebrovascular disease (stroke)?

A

Present in approx half of cases

CKD
Hypertension
HAC
Protein losing enteropathy
Cardiac disease
Neoplasia
Angiostrongylus vasorum
DM, hypothyroidism
85
Q

Treatment for cerebrovascular disease (strokes)? Prognosis?

A

Supportive
Treat underlying disease
Fair-good prognosis
Shorter survival time and more recurrence if concurrent medical condition

86
Q

GME: Which dogs? Signs?

A
Young adults, toy and terrier breeds
Multifocal signs:
- often caudal fossa (vestibular and cerebellar) but anywhere
- may affect spinal cord
- may just cause acute blindness
87
Q

What are the 3 forms of GME?

A
  1. Disseminated - most common, multifocal signs involving forebrain, brainstem, cerebellum, spinal cord
  2. Focal - can be confused with neoplasia
  3. Ocular - acute onset visual impairment, dilated and non-responsive pupils and optic disc oedema
88
Q

What is seen on MRI and CSF analysis with GME?

A

MRI:
- multiple hyperintensities on T2WI and FLAIR
- irregular margins
- predilection for WM but in both GM and WM
- variable degrees of contrast enhancement
CSF analysis:
- pleocytosis (lymphocytic, neutrophilic or mixed)
- increased protein concentration
- occasionally can be normal

89
Q

Which breeds get NE? Presentation? What happens? Signs? Treatment?

A
Mostly pug, chihuahua, yorkie
Acute onset and progressive signs
Worse prognosis than GME
Areas of necrosis mostly in cerebral cortex often coalesce to form large areas of cavitation
Signs:
- seizures
- blindness
- altered behaviour
- circling
- depression
Can potentially stabilise but often permanent deficits (e.g. will still be blind/circle)
Treatment = immunosuppression:
- high dose of corticosteroids plus:
- cytosine arabinoside
- azathioprine
- ciclosporine
- lomustine
90
Q

Why do 30% of cats with clinical FIP have CNS involvement -> vestibular disease? What signs?

A

Lesions result from immune-complex mediated vasculitis
Neurological signs:
- insidious signs, progressive, can be focal, diffuse or multifocal
- more commonly localise to the cerebellomedullary region (tetraparesis, ataxia, nystagmus and loss of balance)
- occasionally only progressive spinal cord disease
- sometimes also behavioural changes, seizures
- +/- iritis, anterior uveitis, chorioretinitis

91
Q

Diagnosis of FIP?

A

Clinical signs +/- ocular changes
Lymphopenia, neutrophilia, non-regenerative
anaemia
Increased serum a-1-acid glycoprotein (AGP)
High serum titres of FCoV Ab
Albumin to globulin ratio <0.8g/dL
CSF (variable): usually high protein and pleocytosis (mononuclear or mixed)
RT-PCR for FCoV RNA on CSF
MRI or CT:
- periventricular contrast enhancement
- ventricular dilation and hydrocephalus

92
Q

Why can hypothyroidism cause vestibular disease?

A

Poss:
- thyroid supports metabolism so normal axonal function and transport
- aberrant lipid metabolism and atherosclerosis
- formation of xanthomata
Can cause peripheral or central vestibular disease
Reversible with supplementation of levothyroxine

93
Q

Possible CNS signs from metronidazole toxicity? When seen? Mechanism? Treatment?

A

Uncommon
Signs of CVS, seizures, tremors, rigidity
Usually when doses ≥60mg/kg/day
Mechanisms of neurotoxicity suggested:
- RNA and DNA binding
- modulation of inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA receptor
Treatment - discontinuation of drug, faster improvement with diazepam

94
Q

When is thiamine deficiency seen? Why can it cause CNS signs? What CNS signs seen?

A

Low amount in food - overcooked
Cats fed all fish diet
Destroyed by sulfites used as a preservative

Essential for oxidation of glucose in Krebs cycle
Tissues dependent on glucose more affected (brain, heart)

Signs:

  • anorexia, lethargy
  • vestibular signs
  • seizures
  • reduced VOR, mydriasis with reduced PLR
95
Q

What is the most common brain tumour causing vestibular signs?

A

Caudal fossa menigiomas

96
Q

What CNS signs may be seen with otitis media/interna? Why?

A
CNVII, CNVIII and sympathetic supply to eye pass by middle ear
Signs:
- facial paralysis
- peripheral vestibular signs
- horner's syndrome
- pain opening mouth
97
Q

Idiopathic vestibular disease - How do they present? Diagnosis? Treatment?

A
= acute onset of PVD, non progressive, spontaneous recovery, improving over 2-4 weeks
More common in dogs
Unknown aetiology
Acute onset of peripheral signs:
- rolling, falling, vomiting, ataxia
- head tilt
- nystagmus (horizontal or rotatory)
Can be bilateral
Can happen simultaneously with facial paralysis
Middle to older age dogs
Diagnosis of exclusion
Some contrast enhancement of CNVIII sometimes seen on MRI
No need to treat
98
Q

What is the atypical form of idiopathic vestibular disease?

A

Acute onset of PVD but clinical signs progressive over 3 week period
Recovery over 3 months
Residual deficits (mild head tilt) not common
More common in cats

99
Q

Causes of facial nerve paresis/paralysis? Signs? Treatment? Prognosis?

A
Causes:
- idiopathic most common
- brainstem lesions (+ other signs)
- middle ear disease
Clinical signs:
- drooping of face
- widening of palpebral fissure
- food and saliva may drop from side of mouth
- absence/reduction of palpebral and corneal reflexes
Treatment:
- avoid KCC (eye lubrication)
Prognosis (Idiopathic):
- extent of recovery variable (permanent deficits 50% cases), over several weeks (~8 weeks)
100
Q

Mechanism of hearing?

A
  1. sound wave
  2. external ear canal and tympanum
  3. 3 ossicles (malleus, incus, stapes)
  4. oval window
  5. perilymph in scala vestibuli
  6. wave flow is reflected to basilar membrane
  7. movement of hair cells
  8. impulse in cochlear neurons
  9. CnVIII goes through internal acoustic meatus
  10. cochlear nucleus in medulla
  11. pass many nuclei in pons and midbrain
  12. cerebral cortex (temporal lobe) bilaterally
101
Q

How is deafness classified?

A

Age of onset - congenital, late onset
Underlying cause - inherited, acquired
Location of defect - peripheral, central
Sensorineural (from cochlea to brain) or conductive (failure to conduct sound from outer to inner ear)

102
Q

What are the most common types of deafness in dogs? Causes?

A

Congenital sensorineural deafness (dog and cat breeds with white pigmentation and blue eye colour, merle and piebald genes)
Acquired sensorineural deafness (chronic otitis interna, ototoxicity, noise trauma, presbycusis)
Acquired conductive deafness (otitis externa and media)

103
Q

What an Otoacoustic Emission test (OAEs)?

A

Low level sounds produced by inner ear as part of normal hearing that can be measured with the use of a microphone

Less expensive, quicker and easier to interpret than BAER
But less reliable

104
Q

How does the BAER test work?

A

Brainstem auditory evoked responses
Click stimuli generated by either headphones or insert earphones
3 SC needle electrodes sample electrical responses of CNVIII and auditory portion of the brainstem and result in up to seven (I-VII) positive waves

105
Q

Important history for spinal disease?

A

Onset
Progressive or not
Pain

106
Q

Which spinal diseases have a peracute/acute, subacute and chronic onset?

A

Vascular and trauma/tocic - acute, static/improving
Inflammatory, infectious, degenerative (IVDD) - subacute, progressive
Degenerative, neoplastic, anomalous, inflammatory/infectious - chronic, progressive

107
Q

Which spinal diseases are painful?

A

Inflammation
Space occupying
Trauma

108
Q

Steroid responsive meningitis-arteritis (SRMA): Which dogs? Cause? Clinical signs? Diagnosis? Treatment? Prognosis?

A

Young dogs (6-18mo)
Most common cause of neck pain in young dogs
Immune mediated cause suggested
Clinical signs:
- lethargy and anorexia
- stiff gait
- fever
- cervical rigidity and spinal hyperaesthesia
- neurological deficits possible with chronic form
- often concurrent IMPA
Diagnosis:
- CSF analysis: neutrophilic pleocytosis in acute form, mononuclear pleocytosis in chronic form
- +/- spinal radiographs, CT, MRI
Treatment:
- corticosteroids for 6-9m
- +/- azathioprine or cyclosporine
- monitoring with repeated CSF analysis or CRP
Prognosis - very good but potential relapse

109
Q

What is discospondylitis? Signs? Diagnosis? Treatment?

A
= Infection of IVD and adjacent vertebrae, most common at L7-S1
Signs:
- Marked spinal pain
- Systemic signs of illness
Diagnosis:
Radiography (can only see after 2-4w), MRI or CT:
- narrowing of IVD space
- roughening of endplates
- proliferation of adjacent bone
Bacteriology: blood, urine, CSF, IVD
Treatment:
- antibiotics for at least 8 weeks
- analgesia
110
Q

Meningomyelitis of unknown origin (MUO): Presentation? Diagnosis? Treatment?

A

(Sub)acute, progressive, can be symmetrical, can be painful
Often multifocal (sometimes affect brain)
Care as same breeds and often similar presentation to IVDD
Diagnosis:
- MRI: variable findings
- CSF: mononuclear or mixed pleocytosis
Treatment: corticosteroids +/- other immunosuppressive drugs

111
Q

Causes of spinal fractures and luxations? Diagnosis?

A
Causes:
- RTA, bite wounds, falling from height
TL spine most commonly
Diagnosis:
- careful neurological exam
- thoracic and abdominal radiography
- survey lateral radiographs of spine
- orthogonal views essential
- care with sedation and manipulation (don't want complete muscle relaxation as may be stabilising fracture)
- CT/MRI may be indicated
112
Q

What is the 3 compartment model of vertebral fractures?

A
Dorsal = articular processes, laminae, pedicles, spinous processes and supporting soft tissue structures
Middle = dorsal longitudinal ligament, dorsal vertebral body and dorsal annulus fibrosus
Ventral = rest of vertebral body, lateral and ventral annulus fibrosus, nucleus pulposus and ventral longitudinal ligament
113
Q

Treatment and prognosis of vertebral fractures and luxations?

A

Initial treatment: stabilise trauma patient and analgesia (NSAIDs)
Use 3 compartment rule -> if unstable needs surgery or splint
Decompression if fragments compressing spinal cord
Splint if transporting patient
Prognosis:
- lack of deep pain perception <5% recovery (usually associated with spinal cord laceration)
- severe cerebral displacement, other injuries, weight and age, time to referral

114
Q

Atlantoaxial (AA) instability: Which animals? Presentation? Cause? Clinical signs? Treatment?

A

Young dogs, toy breeds
Associated with aplasia/hypoplasia of dens in toy breeds
Acute or chronic, often with waxing and waning
Sometimes associated with trauma
Clinical signs:
- neck pain
- ataxia or tetraparesis
Treatment:
- conservative splint for 6-12w has 60% success
- surgery has high preoperative morbidity and mortality (problems with respiration when manipulating) but success up to 90%

115
Q

What is Chiari-like malformation? Which breeds? What does it cause? Signs?

A

= mismatch between caudal fossa volume and its contents (cerebellum and brainstem) with caudal displacement through foramen magnum
All CKCS have this but only about 30% get springomyelia
It can cause:
- hydromyelia = dilatation of central canal
- springomyelia = fluid filled cavitation
- springohydromyelia = both
Signs:
- neck pain
- neck scratching
- torticollis/scoliosis
- thoracic limb weakness and atrophy

116
Q

Treatment of Chiari-like malformation?

A
Medical:
- gabapentin, amantadine
- NSAIDs
- furosemide, omeprazole, acetazolamide
- corticosteroids, paracetamol, opioids
Surgical:
- results in clinical improvement in 50% cases
- does not correct syrinx, high recurrence rate of clinical signs
117
Q

Ischaemic myelopathies - Presentation? What causes it?

A

Peracute, non painful signs often very lateralised
Usually at exercise
Fibrocartilage from nucleus pulpous embolisms in spinal cord vasculature (fibrocartilagenous embolism (FCE))

118
Q

Traumatic disc extrusion - Presentation? Cause?

A

Following traumatic events (RTA, fall from height) or just exercise
Acute onset, non-painful, non-progressive
Herniated nucleus pulposus is non-mineralised, causing mainly cord contusion with minimal compression
Non surgical as no compression to remove

119
Q

Treatment of FCE and traumatic disc extrusions?

A

Supportive care and physiotherapy
Median time to ambulation is 2 weeks
Time to maximal recovery is 3m

120
Q

Difference between intervertebral disc degeneration (IVDD) in chondrodystrophic and non chondrodystrophic breeds?

A

Chondrodystophic breeds:

  • during first 2 years
  • chondroid metamorphis
  • IVD dehydrates and nucleus is invaded by hyaline cartilage, nucleus can mineralise

Non chondrodystrophic breeds:

  • after middle age
  • fibroid metamorphosis
  • IVD dehydrated and nucleus is invaded by fibrocartilage, mineralisation less common
121
Q

What is type I IVDD? breeds and age? Signs?

A

= extrusion
Herniation of nucleus pulposus through annular fibres and extrusion of the nuclear material into the spinal canal
3-6y chondrodystrophic and 6-8y non- chondrodystrophic breeds
Peracute/acute onset, progressive
Typically painful

122
Q

What is type II IVDD? Breeds and age? Signs?

A
= protrusion
Annular protrusion caused by shifting of central nuclear material, commonly associated with fibroid disc degeneration
Older, non-chondrodystrophic breeds
Slowly progressive, chronic onset
Spinal pain may or may not be present
Typically less severe signs
123
Q

Grades of IVDD? Prognosis?

A
Grade 1: no deficits, just pain
Grade 2: paresis, ambulatory
Grade 3: paresis, non ambulatory
Grade 4: paralysis
Grade 5: no pain sensation

Very good prognosis for grades 1-4
Grade 5 5% with conservative, 50-60% with surgery

124
Q

Treatment for IVDD?

A
Conservative:
- strict rest for 4-6 weeks
- analgesia
Surgical:
- if severe neurological deficits (grades 3-5)
- if severe or recurrent pain
- if lack of improvement with rest
125
Q

Cervical spondylomyelopathy (CSM) “Wobblers”: Signs? Treatment?

A

Signs worse in pelvic limbs - paresis, ataxia
Short stilted gait and muscle atrophy in thoracic limbs
Conservative treatment: anti-inflammatories, rest
Surgery:
- decompression vs distraction-stabilisation
- 80% success

126
Q

What causes CSM (Wobblers)?

A

Multifactorial:

  • protrusion of IVD (type II IVDD)
  • hypertrophy of ligament flavum and dorsal longitudinal ligament
  • hypertrophy of synovial membrane
  • stenosis of spinal canal
  • degenerative joint disease of facets
127
Q

Signs of lumbosacral degenerative stenosis?

A

Reluctance to exercise, rise, jump into car, do stairs
Lameness - nerve root signature
Lumbosacral pain
Monoparesis/paraparesis
Proprioceptive deficits, reduced withdrawal reflex, muscle atrophy
Urinary and/or faecal incontinence

128
Q

What causes lumbosacral degenerative stenosis?

A
  1. type II I VDD
  2. sclerosis of vertebral endplates and
    articular processes
  3. hypertrophy of ligaments
  4. hypertrophy of synovial membranes
  5. foraminal stenosis
  6. ventral subluxation of sacrum
129
Q

Treatment for lumbosacral degenerative stenosis?

A
Conservative treatment: anti-inflammatories, gabapentin
Surgical treatment:
- dorsal laminectomy
- dorsal fusion-fixation
- foraminotomy
130
Q

What vertebral anomalies are there? How do they present? Diagnosis? Treatment?

A
Butterfly vertebrae
Block vertebrae
Transitional vertebrae
Hemivertebrae
Spinal stenosis

Chronic onset, slowly progressive
Typically non-painful
Myelography (+/- CT), MRI
Surgical decompression +/- stabilisation

131
Q

Degenerative myelopathy: presentation? Diagnosis? Treatment?

A

Insidious, progressive ataxia and paresis of pelvic limbs, ultimately leading to paralysis (over 6-18m)
Typically T3-L3 myelopathy
Usually asymmetrical
Not painful
Diagnosis of exclusion, genetic test
No treatment but physiotherapy prolongs QOL

132
Q

What is a hemilaminectomy?

A

Removal of one half of the vertebral arch (lamina, articular process and pedicle)
Mainly used in TL spine
Access to lateral and ventral SC
Allows for IVD fenestration

133
Q

What is a dorsal laminectomy? When used?

A

Removal of the dorsal spinous process and laminae
Can be used anywhere, most commonly performed at the LS area
Access to dorsal and dorsolateral SC
IVDD at LS, congenital malformations, neoplasia

134
Q

What is a ventral slot?

A

Slot-like opening ventrally through the IVD and cranial and caudal endplates of cervical vertebrae
Access to ventral SC (IVDD)
Limited view

135
Q

UMN and LMN incontinence?

A

UMN:
- lesions cranial to sacral SC that interrupt afferent sensory and efferent motor pathways
- impair voluntary micturition, distended bladder difficult to express
LMN:
- lesions in sacral SC, sacral spinal nerves and plexus, pelvic and pudendal nerves
- distended bladder, continually overflowing and dribbling

136
Q

Which drugs can be used for urinary incontinence?

A

Bethanecol, cisapride - increase detrusor contraction by cholinergic stimulation
Propantheline bromide - reduce detrusor hyperreflexia as anticholinergic
Phenylpropanolamine - increases urethral tone as a-adrenergic agonist
Phenoxybenzamine, prazosin - redce urethral tone as a-adrenergic antagonist

137
Q

What are non specific signs of generalised neuromuscular disease?

A

Tetraparesis and exercise intolerance/collapse
Stiff-stilted gait with reduced stride length, bunny hopping
+/- Proprioceptive deficits
Muscle atrophy and tremors/fasciculations (especially when weight bearing)
May have dysphonia, regurgitation, difficulty chewing/opening mouth

138
Q

What are the general signs of lesions in motor units?

A

Reduced/absent reflexes
Muscle atrophy
Reduced tone

139
Q

Clinical signs of neuropathies?

A

Can be cranial and/or spinal nerves and mono, multiple mono or generalised
Motor +/- sensory deficits (proprioception, nociception, hypo- or para-esthesia)
Severe flaccid paresis, neurogenic atrophy and reduced-absent reflexes

140
Q

Clinical signs of junctionopathies?

A

Always generalised
Classicaly exercise intolerance with fatigue
Normal sensory function
Often intact tendon reflexes unless severe weakness

141
Q

Clinical signs of myopathies?

A

Generalised or focal (usually symmetrical)
Atrophy or hypertrophy
Specific features:
- dimple contractures (myotonia)
- myalgia
- restricted joint movement (contracture)
Normal sensory function
Often normal tendon reflexes but exceptions

142
Q

Definition of paresis/plegia?

A

= Reduced/absent voluntary movement

143
Q

Clinical signs of UMN and LMN dysfunction?

A

UMN: (wobbly)

  • long strided, incoordinated, irregular, ataxic gait
  • slow postural reactions
  • normal/increased reflexes
  • none/disuse muscle atrophy
  • normal/increased muscle tone

LMN: (weak)

  • short strided, appears stiff/lame, difficulty supporting weight, bunny hopping
  • normal postural reactions if supported
  • reduced reflexes
  • neurogenic muscle atrophy (rapid and severe)
  • reduced muscle tone
144
Q

How to localise

A

Slide 13

145
Q

General diagnostic approach to neuromuscular problems?

A
Haematology
Biochemistry:
- CK and AST
- electrolytes K+, Ca2+, Na+
- glucose
- cholesterol
Urinalysis:
- myoglobinuria (muscle damage)
Chest radiography (conscious):
- megaoesophagus +/- aspiration pneumonia
Endocrine tests
Serology for infectious diseases
CSF
Electrodiagnostics
Muscle biopsy
Nerve biopsy

Avoid GA/sedation - risks

146
Q

Specific diagnostic tests for neuromuscular problems?

A

Specific auto-antibodies (nAChR Ab in acquired myasthenia gravis, 2M Ab in masticatory myositis)
Edrophonium response test
Lactate and pyruvate (exercise testing for mitochondrial dysfunction)
Genetic testing:
- Labrador centronuclear myopathy
- Leonberger polyneuropathy
- etc

147
Q

Muscle biopsies for neuromuscular problems - Preparation?

A

Formalin-fixed samples:
- histological stains such as H&E
- can diagnose inflammatory infiltrates, fibrosis
- but will miss a lot of info if just use these
Fresh-frozen samples (cryosections):
- histological stains
- enzymatic reactions
- immunohistochemistry
Electron microscopy:
- rapid fixation in formalin or glutaraldehyde

148
Q

Nerve biopsy?

A
Muscle biopsy
– denervation changes
– intrafascicular nerve branches
Fascicular nerve biopsy
– Axon structure and density
– Myelin sheath thickness and integrity
– Schwann cells, support tissues, infiltrates
Specialist laboratory required for
analysis
149
Q

What is polyradiculitis? Cause? Presentation? Signs? Natural disease progression?

A

Relatively common (dogs>cats affected)
Inflammation of nerves and roots:
- idiopathic/vaccine (rabies)/contact with racoons
- breed predisposition in Bengal cats
- demyelination (axon damage in severe forms)
Most pathology is in ventral spinal roots so usually pure merit deficits
CN not affected other than mild facial paresis
No sensory deficits
Acute onset, rapidly progressive (days):
- tetra/paraparesis -> non ambulatory tetaparesis/plegia
- flaccid, markedly reduced motor function (inc absent reflexes)
- can affect respiratory muscles
Natural disease progression:
- inflammation is of short duration
- recovery over days-weeks (demyelination)
- more prolonged if axonal damage

150
Q

Diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of polyradiculoneuritis?

A

Diagnosis:
- clinical signs and history
- F waves and CSF analysis (lumbar) supportive)
Treatment:
- supportive (recumbent care, physiotherapy, poss ventilatory support)
- specific (human IV Ig?)
Prognosis = fair (guarded if respiratory dysfunction

151
Q

What is myasthenia gravis? Types?

A

A junctionopathy
D/t reduced neuromuscular transmission
Acquired:
- immune mediated: Abs against nAChR in majority
- can be paraneoplastic, especially thymoma in cats
- generalised most common in dogs (cats less likely to have megaoesophagus)
- fulminant: acute onset, rapidly progressive
- focal: facial, pharyngeal, laryngeal, megaoesophagus
- megaoesophagus in >80% of dogs with MG
- thymoma in 25% of cats
Congenital: AR inheritence

152
Q

Diagnosis of myasthenia gravis? Prognosis?

A

Diagnosis:
- clinical signs
- nAChR Ab test is gold standard (slow to get results)
- electrodiagnostic tests (repetitive nerve stimulation)
- “Tension” edrophonium response test
Treatment:
- anti-cholinesterase (pyridostigmine p/o, neostigmine i/m)
- immunosuppression (pros and cons, better in cats than dogs)
- thymectomy?
- postural feeding if megaoesophagus

Appears to be self limiting in some dogs so monitor nAChR Ab titres

Prognosis guarded

  • fulminant forms can be difficult to treat
  • poor if aspiration pneumonia
153
Q

What causes botulism? Clinical signs?

A

Ingestion of contaminated food (esp animal carcasses) - Clostridium botulinum exotoxins
Rare in dogs and cats
Toxin absorbed from the gut and blocks vesicle fusion with the presynaptic membrane and ACh release
Clinical signs due to nicotinic ACh synapses (junctionopathy):
- acute onset rapidly progressive tetraparesis (2-3d)
- may affect CNs: jaw tone, facial paralysis, gag reflex, megaoesophagus
- may affect respiratory muscles
Clinical signs due to muscarinic ACh synapses (dysautonomia):
- urinary dysfunction
- GI dysmotility
- mydriasis
- reduced tear production

154
Q

Diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of botulism?

A

Diagnosis:
- clinical signs
- electrophysiology
- demonstrate toxin (usually not possible) or serology (retrospective exposure)
Treatment:
- supportive care (bladder management, recumbency care, megaoesphagus management, physiotherapy)
- (anti-toxin)
Prognosis
- depends upon severity of clinical signs
- generally poor if impaired ventilation/aspiration pneumonia

155
Q

Causes of myositis?

A
Generalised inflammatory:
- IM polymyositis
- dermatomyositis (familial in collies, shelties) - prominent skin lesions
- polysystemic IM diseases
Focal myositis:
- masticatory
- extra-ocular
- vizsla polymyositis
Paraneoplastic:
- thymoma
- lymphoma
Infectious:
- Neospora
- Toxoplasma
- etc
156
Q

Clinical signs of infectious myositis due to Neospora in puppies? Diagnosis? Treatment? Prognosis?

A
Clinical signs:
- radiculoneuritis and polymyositis
- pelvic limb hyperextension (usually starts in one limb and progresses to other)
- ascending paralysis of pelvic limbs with muscle contracture and arthrogryposis
Diagnosis:
- clinical signs
- CK/AST
- EMG
- biopsy
- serology
Treatment:
- clindamycin/TMPS + pyrimethamine
Poor prognosis with contractures
157
Q

Clinical signs, diagnostic tests and treatment of immune mediated polymyositis?

A
Clinical signs
– Acute or chronic onset, variable signs
– Exercise intolerance, generalised weakness, muscle atrophy
– Pyrexia, stiffness, non-ambulatory tetraparesis, reluctance to move,
lowered head carriage, myalgia
– +/- oesophageal involvement
Diagnostic tests
– H+B: Inflammatory leucogram, elevated
CK/AST (acute typically +++)
– Electrodiagnostics: marked EMG
abnormalities, normal MNCV
– Muscle biopsy for diagnosis
– Rule out infectious diseases and tumours
Treatment
– Prednisolone
– +/- other immunosuppressives
158
Q

Masticatory myositis - Cause? Clinical signs? Diagnosis? Treatment?

A
Dogs only
Antibodies to 2M myosin isoform 
Juvenile form in CKCS
Clinical signs: 
- acute or chronic
- swollen/painful MM, exophthalmos
- trismus (pain/fibrosis), MM atrophy
Diagnosis
- imaging (muscles + TMJ)
- CK (may be normal or slightly
elevated)
- 2M antibodies
- EMG
- biopsy temporal muscles
Treatment
- prednisolone +/- other IM drugs
- physiotherapy
159
Q

Trigeminal neuritis - What is it? What happens? Clinical signs? Diagnosis? Treatment?

A

Dogs&raquo_space; cats
Inflammation throughout trigeminal nerves including ganglia bilaterally
Demyelination -> axon degeneration
Clinical signs:
- acute onset paresis/plegia of masticatory
muscles -> dropped jaw
- normal gag and tongue tone and movements (Horner’s or facial paresis can be seen)
- sensory deficits in ~30% pf cases
- masticatory muscle atrophy
Diagnosis
- MRI: swollen, inflamed nerves
- CSF
Treatment
- resolves usually within 3weeks with supportive care

160
Q

Traumatic neuropathies: What are neuropraxia, axonotmesis and neurotmesis? Prognosis of each?

A

Neuropraxia = temporary nerve damage (conduction block) but no disruption of the nerve or myelin sheath
- prognosis for return of function is good, often within a few days
Axonotmesis = disruption of axon but intact basal lamina and myelin sheath
- prognosis is variable, but rate of axonal regrowth is only 1 to 4 mm per day, recovery will be slow
Neurotmesis = partial or complete transection of the nerve (axon and supporting structures)
- partial recovery is possible, but complete recovery is unlikely

161
Q

Clinical signs and prognosis of brachial plexus avulsion?

A

Monoparesis, cutaneous truancy absent ipsilaterally, Horner’s syndrome
Radial function necessary for gait
Poor prognosis with loss of nociception

162
Q

Clinical signs, diagnosis and treatment of brachial plexus tumours?

A
Most are intrinsic e.g. malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumour
Clinical signs:
- chronic progressive thoracic limb lameness, pain, muscle atrophy
- neuro deficits: partial/complete plexus involvement, monoparesis-plegia, progression to myelopathy, palpable mass
Diagnosis:
- electrodiagnostics
- imaging
- US
- CT
- MRI best 
Treatment and definitive diagnosis:
- surgery
Prognosis poor if spinal involvement
163
Q

Definition of a seizure?

A

= A transient occurrence of signs and/or symptoms due to abnormal excessive or synchronous neuronal activity in the brain

164
Q

Localisation of seizures?

A

Always forebrain

165
Q

Pathogenesis of seizures?

A

Imbalance in excitation and inhibition

Balance moves towards excessive excitement or decreased inhibition

166
Q

Stages of a seizure?

A
  1. Prodrome - any predicting events
  2. Aura - initial manifestation of a seizure
  3. Ical - seizure event, involuntary muscle tone or movement +/- abnormal sensations or behaviour
  4. Post-ictal - minutes to days, can have unusual behaviour or neurological deficits
167
Q

What happens with the octal event of a seizure? How long does it last? Phenotypic categories?

A

Usually around 60-90 seconds
Peracute onset
Characteristics are the same for each event
Occurs most commonly at sleep or rest
Autonomic signs
2 major phenotypic categories:
- generalised: involvement of both cerebral hemispheres simultaneously, consciousness impaired
- focal: initial activation of one part of one cerebral hemisphere or region in the forebrain, complex focal seizures have altered consciousness

168
Q

What phases may a generalised seizure have?

A

May have one or several:

  1. Tonic-clonic (most common)
  2. Tonic
  3. Clonic
  4. Myoclonic
  5. Atonic
169
Q

Forms of focal seizures?

A
  1. Motor
  2. Autonomic
  3. Behavioural
170
Q

What are audiogenic reflex seizures? How to control?

A

Cats
Late onset (15y)
Reflex seizure = seizure that is objectively and consistently precipitated by environmental or internal stimuli
In response to noise
Myoclonic seizures progressing to generalised tonic/clonic seizures in some
Levetiracetam to control

171
Q

What can look like seizures but isn’t?

A
Narcolepsy/cataplexy
Neuromuscular collapse
Syncope
Movement disorder
Metabolic disease
Vestibular disease
172
Q

How can idiopathic head tremor syndrome be differentiated form a seizure?

A

Can distract and stop it with a treat etc
Conscious throughout
Lasts too long
Acts normal afterwards

173
Q

Causes of seizures?

A
  1. Reactive seizures:
    - occurs as a natural response from the normal brain to a transient disturbance in function
    - concurrent neurological signs usually present
    - metabolic or toxic
  2. Idiopathic epilepsy:
    - genetic or presumed genetic in origin
    - no inter-ictal neurological signs
  3. Structural epilepsy:
    - epileptic seizures which are provoked by intracranial or cerebral pathology
    - concurrent neurological signs usually present
    - inflammatory, neoplastic, traumatic
174
Q

What causes episodic falling of the CKCS? what does it look like?

A

Paroxysmal hypertonicity found in CKCS

Conscious and aware throughout

175
Q

What is dyskinesia? What is the most common one?

A

Abnormal movement
Most common is paroxysmal gluten sensitivity in Border terrier - presumed problem in basal nuclei
Conscious and aware throughout

176
Q

Idiopathic epilepsy - Age affected? Presentation? Types?

A

Dogs 6m-6y
Normal neurological exam between seizures

  1. Genetic epilepsy: causative gene has been identified:
    - Logotto Romagnolo (protein truncating mutation in LGI2 gene)
    - Belgian shepherd
    - Boerboels
  2. Suspected genetic epilepsy: a genetic influence supported by a high breed prevalence (>2%)
  3. Epilepsy of unknown cause: epilepsy in which the cause in unknown, no indication of structural epilepsy
177
Q

Diagnosis of idiopathic epilepsy?

A
Diagnosis of exclusion
Tier 1 confidence interval:
- 2 or more seizures 24h apart
- age of onset 6m-6y
- normal inter-ictal examination
- no clinically significant abnormalities on minimum database (haematology, biochemistry, fasting bile acids, urinalysis)
Tier 2 confidence interval:
- unremarkable fasting and post-prandial bile acids
- MRI of brain
- CSF analysis
- as well as tier 1 factors
Tier 3 confidence interval:
- ictal or inter-ictal EEG abnormalities
- as well as tier 1 and 2 factors
178
Q

When to MRI a dog with seizures as less likely idiopathic epilepsy?

A

Age of onset <6m or >6y
Interictal neurological abnormalities (consistent with intracranial neurolocalisation)
Status epileptics or cluster seizure
Previous presumptive diagnosis of IE and drug resistance with a single AED titrated to the highest tolerable dose

179
Q

When would you start treatment for idiopathic epilepsy?

A

Structural or metabolic epilepsy
Status epileptics or cluster seizures
An interictal period of 6m or less
Post-ictal signs are severe or last longer than 24h
The seizure frequency and/or duration is increasing and/or seizure severity deteriorating over 3 interictal periods
The first seizure is within 1 month of a traumatic event

180
Q

Treatment for epilepsy?

A

Epilepsy cannot be cured with medication but drugs can be used to symptomatically suppress epileptic seizures
3 licensed maintenance treatments in dogs:
- phenobarbitone
- bromide
- imepitoin
No drugs licensed in cats

181
Q

Phenobarbitone for epilepsy - How effective? Mechanism of action? Initial dose? Monitoring? Aim?

A

Effective in decreasing seizure frequency in 60-90% of dogs with idiopathic epilepsy
Mechanism = augments the inhibitory effects of GABA -> prolonging the chloride channel opening at GABAA receptor
Initial dose:
- dogs 3mg/kg BID
- cats: 2mg/kg BID
Monitoring:
- 2 weeks after any dose change (plain serum)
- 3 months (inc haematology and biochemistry)
6 months (haematology and biochemistry)
Aim = levels between 25-30mg/L
Takes about 10-14d for peak effects

182
Q

Side effects of phenobarbitone?

A

Sedation, ataxia (most adapt after 2 weeks)
PUPDPP
Hepatotoxicity - always get increased ALP (and poss ALT, don’t worry unless very high)
Haematological abnormalities (neutropenia, anaemia, thrombocytopenia)

183
Q

How is phenobarbitone metabolised? When contraindicated?

A

Mainly via hepatic microsomal enzymes
Potent inducer of cytochrome P450 enzyme activity in the liver:
- increases hepatic production of reactive oxygen species
- increasing the risk of hepatic injury
Contraindicated in dogs with hepatic dysfunction
Also leads to accelerated clearance of itself over time

184
Q

Bromide for epilepsy - Form given in? How given? Mechanism? Initial dose? Monitoring? Therapeutic range?

A

Usually KBr or NaBr salts
Not licensed as a monotherapy
Can be used in combination
mechanism of action = competes with Cl- transport across nerve cell membranes and inhibits Na+ transport -> membrane hyper polarisation which raises the seizure threshold
Initial dose:
- dogs 30mg/kg SID
- NOT cats
Monitoring:
- 12 weeks plain serum (inc haematology and biochemistry)
Therapeutic interval:
- 10-15mmol/L in combo with phenobarbitone
- or 12.5-37.5mmol/L as mono therapy
Takes 12 weeks for peak effects
Must be on consistent diet to be effective

185
Q

Side effects of bromide?

A

Sedation

Ataxia and pelvic limb weakness

186
Q

Metabolism of bromide?

A

Excreted unchanged in urine

Undergoes tubular reabsorption in competition with chloride

187
Q

Imepitoin for epilepsy - Licensing? Mechanism? Dose? Monitoring? Side effects? Metabolism?

A

Not licensed for cluster seizures or structural epilepsy
Only licensed as monotherapy
mechanism = low affinity partial agonist for benzodiazepine binding sire of GABAA receptor
Dose:
- dogs 10-30mg/kg BID
No monitoring required
Side effects - similar but fewer than phenobarbitone
Metabolism:
- metabolised by liver
- excreted in faeces

188
Q

What non licensed drugs are used in dogs for epilepsy? Doses? Side effects?

A
Levetiracetam:
- 20mg/kg TID (initial loading dose of 60mg/kg can be considered)
- titrate dose up in cats
- minimal side effects (sedation)
- PO, IV
Zonisamide:
- 10mg/kg BID
- side effects: ataxia, sedation, dry eye, inappetance
- reduce phenobarbitone doses by 25%
189
Q

Drugs used for epilepsy in cats?

A

Nothing licensed
Diazepam - fulminant hepatic necrosis associated with oral administration
Propofol - Heinz body anaemia
Potassium bromide - eosinophilic bronchitis
Phenobarbitone - lower starting (2mg/kg) and loading doses (12-15mg/kg)

190
Q

What seizures are emergencies?

A
Cluster seizures:
- 2 or more in 24h
- dogs with IE who suffer from CS are less likely to achieve remission, have decreased survival time, are more likely to be euthanised
Status epilepticus:
- seizure lasting >5 mins
- or >2 seizures without full recovery
191
Q

Why are cluster seizures and status epilepticus emergencies?

A

Irreversible neuronal damage occurs after 30-60 minutes
Due to failure of the mechanisms that usually stop an isolated seizures -> abnormal excessive excitation or ineffective inhibition
-> excitotoxic cell injury due to excessive glutamate release

192
Q

What are the stages of cluster seizures or status epilepticus causing brain damage?

A
Stage 1 - increased autonomic activity:
- tachycardia
- hypertension
- hyperglycaemia
Stage 2 - irreversible neuronal damage (after 30 mins):
- hypotension
- hypoglycaemia
- hyperthermia
- hypoxia
- excessive electrical activity results in brain damage
193
Q

Causes of status epilepticus?

A
Idiopathic epilepsy
Neoplasia
CNS inflammatory disease
Trauma
Metabolic disorders
Toxicities
194
Q

How to treat emergency seizures (cluster seizures or status epilepticus)?

A
First stop the seizure! - Diazepam 1mg/kg per rectum
Take history
IV catheter placement
Examination
Baseline blood work - minimum =
- glucose
- sodium
- calcium
- renal and hepatic function
In existing epileptics - check serum levels of anti epileptic drugs

If not already on AEDs:
Start AEDs: phenobarbital 3mg/kg BID
If further seizure activity over next 1-3h or if seizures do not stop: phenobarbital loading (18-21mg/kg in 3mg/kg boluses)
If further seizures: levetiracetam loading (60mg/kg)

Other meds based on individual:

  • KBr rectal loading (600mg/kg over 24h as 5 rectal boluses of 100mg/kg q4h
  • consider volatile anaesthesia
  • zonisamide 10mg/kg PO
  • dexmedetomidine CRI (can be considered for management of agitation on recovery from CRI)
195
Q

What to do for breakthrough seizures (emergency seizures still going despite emergency treatment)?

A
Diazepam - interacts with plastic and light
Midazolam:
- 0.3mg/kg IV bolus followed by 0.3mg/kg/hr
- not in hepatic dysfunction
- dogs in SE may become refractory
Propofol:
- 6mg/kg IV bolus followed by 6mg/kg/hr
- care Heinz body anaemia in cats

Ensure dog needs it - don’t hesitate if does!

Also although idiopathic epilepsy likely, consider underlying causes and treat (e.g won’t stop hypoglycaemic seizure without correcting glucose!)

196
Q

Monitoring of emergency seizures while on treatment?

A

HR and RR
BP - systolic >90mmHg (MAP 70-80)
Urine production - 1-2ml/kg/hr
Oxygenation/ventilation - pulse oximetry >95%, ETCO2 35-40mmHg
Temperature
Neurological exam - allow assessment for signs of improvement/deterioration
If on an infusion:
- pharyngeal tone - intubation if risk of aspiration

197
Q

Management of emergency seizures while treating?

A
Well padded cage - clean and adequate bedding
Monitor for pressure sores
Eye lubrication q2-4h
Feeding/water
Thermoregulation
198
Q

What must be ruled out in a young dog with seizures, sleeping more after eating?

A

PSS