coonhound paralysis

Dogs Fall in the Fall

Today, you're presented with a 4 year old German Short-Haired Pointer with a history of rapidly progressive difficulty walking. Although your heart rate may be going up when you read this on your schedule, you're calm, cool and collected as you pick up your pleximeter and head into the room.

Your technician has provided the following history for you: The pet was out hunting last weekend with the owner and no unusual circumstances occurred. He did run away two days ago and came back with a small bite wound on his muzzle. The pet is up-to-date on vaccination (including rabies) and has not had any change in voiding habits prior to the last 24 hours. The dog is fed a mixture of a commercial kibble diet and raw meat. There is no reported prior medical history. 

Physical exam: Unremarkable other than the bite wound. It is healing, not infected (visual inspection only) and does not appear to be bothering him. He is his typical, high strung, friendly self!

Neurologic examination:

Mentation: BAR

Cranial nerves: normal

Postural reactions: Absent in 3 of four limbs, reduced in right front limb only. 

Reflexes: Absent patellar reflexes bilaterally, absent withdrawal reflexes in both pelvic limbs (but he howled pitifully when you tried to do it!) reduced withdrawal in both thoracic limbs, more notable on the left thoracic limb than the right. Absent cutaneous trunci reflex to T6 on the left, and reduced to T/L junction on right. 

Palpation: non-painful on palpation but hyperesthetic when trying to do reflexes. This is unusual for him as he doesn't typically mind his feet touched or even flinch during vaccinations. 

 Gait: Non-ambulatory tetraparetic with paraplegic (no motor observed in PL), marked paresis in both thoracic limbs, more noted in left than right. 

Neuroanatomic lesion localization:

First, decide if this is brain or spinal cord.

1. Brain: With reduced reflexes, it isn't a brain problem.

2. Spinal cord: It could be a spinal cord problem, but then it must be localized to BOTH C6-T2 and L4-S3 (entire plexi for both sites) and, although possible, it is highly unusual. If that is where we localize the problem, how do we account for the c. trunci reflex? Based on the findings, it should suggest a lesion mid thoracic lesion (1-2 segments cranial to the cranial most reflex) and that doesn't fit in either C6-T2 or L4-S3 segments, does it? No. Therefore, this isn't a spinal cord problem either. This is neuromuscular, my friends!

Neuromuscular neuroanatomic lesion localization.

We can narrow it down further within the neuromuscular localization. You have 3 choices: 1) Muscle 2) neuromuscular junction and 3) nerve. Dogs with myopathies (muscle disease) have normal reflexes (and he doesn't) so it isn't a myopathy. Dogs with disease of the neuromuscular junction have absent reflexes (and he does), so it could be this. Dogs with a peripheral neuropathy often have patchy loss of reflexes (and he does) so it could be this. Therefore, you would suspect either a neuromuscular junctionopathy or peripheral neuropathy in this dog. 

Differential diagnoses:

1. Junctionopathy - botulism, tick paralysis, coral snake envenomation, Ca blockers, acute myasthenia gravis (rare).

2. Acute peripheral neuropathy - hypothyroid crisis, polyradiculoneuropathy (APN), autoimmune (rare). 

Of these, the most likely is APN (Coonhound paralysis) based on the dog's history, neurologic exam and signalment. 

Although an ELISA test does exist (Developed at UW-Vet School), it has a long turn around time and therefore isn't terribly useful for the initial diagnosis. I find it helpful to rule out the other causes rather than focusing on diagnosis this cause. I suggest applying a tick repellant (rule out tick paralysis), submitting a myasthenia titer, checking CBC, serum biochemistry for signs of biochemical imbalance (calcium specifically) and a T4. If all of this is normal, we're likely back to acute polyradiculoneuropathy (APN). 

Treatment is purely supportive. This disease is caused by an autoimmune attack against the nerve roots triggered by many things, including racoon saliva. Yes, saliva. Interestingly, a report in 2019 found an association with the consumption of raw meat contaminated with Campylobacter jejunii within 7 days of the development of APN. Antibodies are available and can be administered in the early phase but may not be available in your area. Supportive care includes ventilatory monitoring and mechanical ventilation as needed (they can loose the ability to contract the intercostal muscles and therefore cannot inhale), nutritional support (they can eat, drink and void voluntarily but need to do so sternal and be cleaned frequently to avoid bedsores), and nursing care (see prior). Signs reach peak severity within 10 days for most dogs. Signs typically improve within 3 months (12 weeks).  Please note that this disease is very recoverable with appropriate nursing care but it takes long, and intensive, at home nursing care. Sadly, affected dogs do not gain a sustained immunity after they recover and can show signs again if they are exposed to an appropriate trigger. 

Please let me know if you have any questions about today's TidBit Tuesday. I hope you have a great week!