Cranial nerve diseases

Geriatric Vestibular Disease

Geriatric Vestibular Disease of Dogs and Cats


Geriatric vestibular disease (GVD) is characterized by an acute onset, unilateral failure of the peripheral vestibular system. The cause remains idiopathic, but causes such as neuritis (viral or immune mediated) or atrophy have been hypothesized. A recent study (DOI: 10.1111/vru.12893) by Sungjun Won and Junghee Yoon out of South Korea identified a significant size difference in the utricle, one of the parts of the bony labyrinth in the ear, in dogs with GVD compared older dogs without GVD. Necropsy evaluation has shown a reduction in the size of the peripheral CN 8 and the affected ganglion, further supporting atrophy as a cause. And yet, it is difficult to explain the recovery that most dogs and cats experience 1-6 weeks after onset of signs.

Common Clinical Signs

Animals with GVD are middle age to older dogs and cats and demonstrate peracute onset of signs, often proceeded by vomiting with no progression after 24 hours. These dogs and cats usually have very severe vestibular signs such as head tilt, nystagmus, ataxia (if ambulatory), positional strabismus and rolling/nonambulatory vestibular ataxia. IF you are able to have the animal stand you should not find paw replacement deficits, hemiparesis or obtunded mentation. If you do, the lesion localization is central and a different set of differential diagnoses should be considered.

Differential Diagnoses for Peripheral Vestibular Disease
Not accounting for history, a general list of differential diagnoses for peripheral vestibular disease would be as follows:
Degenerative: none
Anomalous: none
Metabolic: hypothyroidism
Neoplasia/nutritional: Yes (lymphoma, nerve sheath tumor)
Infectious/Inflammatory/Idiopathic: Yes (neuritis and geriatric vestibular disease)
Trauma/Toxin: Metronidazole SHOULD be central, but it may be difficult to tell in a recumbent animal. Trauma - less common in dogs and cats.
Vascular: none.

Geriatric vestibular disease is diagnosed by exclusion at this time. Although the report referenced above does provide measurements for the utricle on MRI, it is not yet a diagnostic marker for GVD. Exclude all other causes using chest x-rays, blood work including T4, brain MRI and spinal tap if needed.

Treatment?

This is a self-resolving disease. The head tilt is commonly permanent, but all other signs of vestibular disease should resolve over several weeks. Signs begin to improve 24-48 hours after onset of signs but may take up to 1 week to show improvement. Full resolution of clinical signs should be by 6 weeks. If signs wax and wane, or progressive worsen, GVD is not the proper diagnosis. Supportive care such anti-emetics. diazepam or meclizine for anti-vertigo effects, and nutritional support such as hand feeding (only when sternal!) , may be used. IV fluids may be needed for severe or prolonged nausea.

Prognosis

Don't euthanize these pets in the first 24 hours! They look miserable...but they can recover with time and supportive care. This can be very difficult for clients to witness and, because the pets are elderly, may result in a triggered response to consider euthanasia. If you can, please hang in there for a few days even if that means hospitalization. Signs may occur multiple times over the animals' life.

Thanks for reading! This TidBit Tuesday was prompted by one of you so keep those suggestions coming! If there is something you'd like to read about, chances are that someone else is also interested too.

My hours are changing the last week of August due to school starting. As always, please let me know if you cannot find an appointment time through the online scheduler.
Have a great week!

Time for a Tongue Twister!

Signalment: 12 year old MC Mixed breed dog, 45 kg
History: 1 month history of change in bark, with a 1-2 week history of difficulty eating and drinking. The owners also identified difficulty walking in the last few days and a decrease in the dog's interaction with them.
Physical Examination: Grade II/VI left heart murmur, previously noted and not progressed. The remainder of the exam was unremarkable.

Neurologic Examination

Mentation: Mildly obtunded. The pet interacted when asked, but otherwise seemed content to stare at the floor.
Cranial nerves: Decreased to absent gag reflex, tongue atrophy (see the photo above), all remaining cranial nerves were normal.
Gait: Ambulatory mild proprioceptive ataxia in all four legs
Reflexes: Normal spinal reflexes including c. trunci and perineal.
Palpation: Non painful spinal palpation however pain elicited with cervical ventroflexion
Postural reactions: absent right thoracic and right pelvic limb paw replacement test, normal left paw replacement thoracic and pelvic.

Neuroanatomic Lesion Localization?? To do this, we need to break it down and identify all of the possible anatomic localizations each neurologic deficit could be noted. Unfortunately the table does not copy to this blog very well so please email me or join our TidBit Tuesday mailing list to get all of the details.
What I did was list all of the possible locations that the affected deficit might involve and then narrowed down the lesion localization two ways:

  1. Find the common denominator. In this case, the medulla. OR

  2. Find the cranial nerve(s) affected and determine if the pet also has: a) abnormal mentation, b) hemiparesis ipsilateral to the affected cranial nerve or c) paw replacement deficits ipsilateral to the affected cranial nerve. If they do, it is central. If not, it is a likely a peripheral neuropathy.

Neuroanatomic Lesion Localization: Medulla, right side.

Differential Diagnoses: Neoplasia, meningoencephalitis (infectious or inflammatory)

Case Conclusion

This dog had normal CBC, serum biochemistry, UA, chest radiographs and abdominal ultrasound. Brain MRI identified a discrete contrast enhancing extra-axial mass in the right caudal fossa affecting the right side of the medulla. This finding was most consistent with a meningioma. A spinal tap was not performed due to the proximity of the mass to the cerebellomedullary cistern. Based on the working diagnosis surgical decompression, radiation therapy or supportive care were discussed with the owners and they elected supportive care.

You may recognize this case if you have been a loyal TidBit Tuesday reader. This was repeated from February 2020 because I felt like it was a good time to review cranial nerve lesion localization with a very interesting cranial nerve deficit. Thanks for reading (again)!

I hope you have a great week!

Idiopathic Facial Nerve Paralysis

Idiopathic Facial Nerve Paralysis


I thought we'd continue our theme from last week about peripheral neuropathies and talk about a neuropathy that we all (I think) see fairly regularly: Idiopathic facial nerve paralysis.

What is it?
Idiopathic facial nerve paralysis (IFNP) happens for, ahem, unknown reasons. There is some type of synaptic block that, as of now, has an unknown cause. The facial nerve is a motor nerve that starts in the medulla (brainstem), courses through the skull and bulla on it's way to the face. Other causes of facial nerve paralysis such as hypothyroidism, neoplasia, otitis media, polyps, and rarely neuritis. Remember: you must localize the lesion to the peripheral CN 7 to include IFNP on your list of differential diagnoses!

What does it look like?
The facial nerve innervates the muscles of facial expression in dogs and cats as well as providing innervation to the lacrimal eye glands. Clinical signs are typically unilateral and, result in an inability to move the eyelids (inability to blink), inability to move the lips (dogs may accidentally chew on their lips), lack of ear movement (especially noticeable in cats), and a dry, red eye with possible ocular ulceration.

Clinical Course
Signs are typically acute in nature with rapid progression to full clinical manifestation. Spontaneous resolution occurs in 3-6 weeks. Yay!

Management
Supportive care, such as eye lubricant, and ensuring lip injury is minimized by limiting chewing toys/bones, is the mainstay treatment. Antibiotics, steroids, NSAIDs and other medications do not improve the recovery time!

It's short and sweet this week. Please let me know if you have a specific topic of interest! Have a great week, and keep those consults coming.

Consults are available Monday-Saturday at various times. Check out www.barnesveterinaryservices.com (press the schedule button in the upper right corner) to schedule. Note: Only veterinarians or veterinary staff may schedule a consult.