Degenerative myelopathy in two Boxer dogs. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Degenerative myelopathy (DM) is a common, slowly progressive, debilitating disease reported in several dog breeds, including the German Shepherd Dog and Pembroke Welsh Corgi. Boxer dogs present occasionally for a thoracolumbar myelopathy for which no cause is identified on MRI or cerebrospinal fluid analysis. Despite a lack of a histologic description of DM in the Boxer in the veterinary literature, such dogs are presumed to have DM. Here we report 2 histologically confirmed cases of DM in the Boxer breed in which histologic studies disclosed marked degenerative changes in the spinal cord that were most prominent in the thoracic and cranial lumbar segments. Lesions consisted of myelin vacuolation and degeneration, myelophagocytosis, reactive astrocytosis, and ellipsoid formation most prominent in the lateral and ventral funiculi. We present a detailed histologic description of DM in the Boxer dog and compare it to DM in other purebred dogs.

published proceedings

  • Vet Pathol

altmetric score

  • 1

author list (cited authors)

  • Miller, A. D., Barber, R., Porter, B. F., Peters, R. M., Kent, M., Platt, S. R., & Schatzberg, S. J.

citation count

  • 16

complete list of authors

  • Miller, AD||Barber, R||Porter, BF||Peters, RM||Kent, M||Platt, SR||Schatzberg, SJ

publication date

  • July 2009