Analyze Diet
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association2021; 259(10); 1188-1195; doi: 10.2460/javma.20.11.0614

Computed tomographic myelography for assessment of the cervical spinal cord in ataxic warmblood horses: 26 cases (2015-2017).

Abstract: To quantify the degree of dural compression and assess the association between site and direction of compression and articular process (AP) size and degree of dural compression with CT myelography. 26 client-oriented horses with ataxia. Spinal cord-to-dura and AP-to-cross-sectional area of the C6 body ratios (APBRs) were calculated for each noncompressive site and site that had > 50% compression of the subarachnoid space. Site of maximum compression had the largest spinal cord-to-dura ratio. Fisher exact test and linear regression analyses were used to assess the association between site and direction of compression and mean or maximum APBR and spinal cord-todura ratio, respectively. Mean ± SD spinal cord-to-dura ratio was 0.31 ± 0.044 (range, 0.20 to 0.41) for noncompressive sites and 0.44 ± 0.078 (0.29 to 0.60) for sites of maximum compression. Sites of maximum compression were intervertebral and extra-dural, most frequently at C6 through 7 (n = 10), followed by C3 through 4 (6). Thirteen horses had dorsolateral and lateral compression at the AP joints, secondary to AP (n = 7) or soft tissue proliferation (6). Site significantly affected direction of compression, and directions of compression from occiput through C4 were primarily ventral and lateral, whereas from C6 through T1 were primarily dorsal and dorsolateral. No linear relationship was identified between mean or maximum APBR and spinal cord-to-dura ratio. CT myelography may be useful for examination of horses with suspected cervical compressive myelopathy. Degree of compression can be assessed quantitatively, and site of compression significantly affected direction of compression.
Publication Date: 2021-11-03 PubMed ID: 34727080DOI: 10.2460/javma.20.11.0614Google Scholar: Lookup
The Equine Research Bank provides access to a large database of publicly available scientific literature. Inclusion in the Research Bank does not imply endorsement of study methods or findings by Mad Barn.
  • Journal Article

Summary

This research summary has been generated with artificial intelligence and may contain errors and omissions. Refer to the original study to confirm details provided. Submit correction.

The study analyzed the application of computed tomographic myelography in assessing the cervical spinal cord of horses presenting ataxia symptoms. Number crunching the degree of dural compression and exploring the correlation between compression site and direction, and the size of articular process (AP) was part of this study, using 26 client-owned horses.

Methodology

  • The researchers measured the spinal cord-to-dura and AP-to-cross-sectional area of the C6 body ratios (APBRs) at both non-compressive sites and those with over 50% compression of the subarachnoid space.
  • The location of greatest compression had the largest spinal cord-to-dura ratio.
  • The Fisher exact test and linear regression analyses were utilized to light up the relationship between the compression site and direction, and the mean or maximum APBR and spinal cord-to-dura ratio.

Findings

  • For non-compressive sites, the mean spinal cord-to-dura ratio was 0.31 while for sites of maximum compression it was 0.44.
  • The most prominent sites for maximum compression were intervertebral and extra-dural, especially at C6 through 7 and then at C3 through 4.
  • Thirteen horses showed signs of dorsolateral and lateral compression at the AP joints, as a result of AP or soft tissue growth.
  • The compression direction was significantly impacted by the compression site.

Conclusion

  • The findings suggest that CT myelography can be beneficial in examining horses potentially suffering from cervical compressive myelopathy.
  • The analysis enables quantitative assessment of compression, with the compression site acting as a significant factor in determining the compression direction.

Cite This Article

APA
Rovel T, Zimmerman M, Duchateau L, Adriaensen E, Mariën T, Saunders JH, Vanderperren K. (2021). Computed tomographic myelography for assessment of the cervical spinal cord in ataxic warmblood horses: 26 cases (2015-2017). J Am Vet Med Assoc, 259(10), 1188-1195. https://doi.org/10.2460/javma.20.11.0614

Publication

ISSN: 1943-569X
NlmUniqueID: 7503067
Country: United States
Language: English
Volume: 259
Issue: 10
Pages: 1188-1195
PII: javma.20.11.0614

Researcher Affiliations

Rovel, Tibor
    Zimmerman, Marieke
      Duchateau, Luc
        Adriaensen, Edouard
          Mariën, Tom
            Saunders, Jimmy H
              Vanderperren, Katrien

                MeSH Terms

                • Animals
                • Ataxia / veterinary
                • Cervical Cord
                • Cervical Vertebrae / diagnostic imaging
                • Horse Diseases / diagnostic imaging
                • Horses
                • Myelography / veterinary
                • Spinal Cord / diagnostic imaging
                • Spinal Cord Compression / diagnostic imaging
                • Spinal Cord Compression / veterinary
                • Tomography, X-Ray Computed / veterinary

                Citations

                This article has been cited 4 times.
                1. Kondo T, Mashimo Y, Sato F, Tsuzuki N, Yamada K. Investigation of a contributing factor for cervical vertebral stenotic myelopathy using computed tomography for measuring the cervical vertebral volume. J Vet Med Sci 2022 Aug 1;84(8):1084-1087.
                  doi: 10.1292/jvms.22-0188pubmed: 35675981google scholar: lookup
                2. Kondo T, Sato F, Tsuzuki N, Watanabe K, Horiuchi N, Kobayashi Y, Yamada K. Characteristic computed tomographic myelography findings in 23 Thoroughbred horses. J Vet Med Sci 2022 Apr 13;84(4):525-532.
                  doi: 10.1292/jvms.22-0036pubmed: 35197397google scholar: lookup
                3. Hellige M, Schröder C, Seehusen F, Cavalleri JM, Rohn K, Stadler P, Geburek F. Computed tomographic myelography of the cranial cervical spine in Warmblood horses with no spinal pathology-Inter- and intravertebral ratios and distribution of contrast columns in neutral and flexed cervical spine. Equine Vet J 2025 Sep;57(5):1375-1386.
                  doi: 10.1111/evj.14552pubmed: 40551666google scholar: lookup
                4. Journée SL, Journée HL, Bergmann W, Chantziaras I, Vanderperren K, Raes E, Reed SM, de Bruijn CM, Berends HI, Delesalle CJG. Evaluation of the diagnostic value of transcranial electrical stimulation (TES) to assess neuronal functional integrity in horses. Front Neurosci 2024;18:1342803.
                  doi: 10.3389/fnins.2024.1342803pubmed: 38665290google scholar: lookup