Vet Comp Orthop Traumatol 2015; 28(02): 145-150
DOI: 10.3415/VCOT-14-07-0109
Case Report
Schattauer GmbH

Bilateral cervical ribs in a Dobermann Pinscher

M. Ricciardi
1   “Pingry” Veterinary Hospital, Bari, Italy
,
A. De Simone
1   “Pingry” Veterinary Hospital, Bari, Italy
,
F. Gernone
1   “Pingry” Veterinary Hospital, Bari, Italy
,
P. Giannuzzi
1   “Pingry” Veterinary Hospital, Bari, Italy
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History

Received:23 July 2014

Accepted:12 February 2014

Publication Date:
26 December 2017 (online)

Summary

An 11-year-old intact female Doberman Pinscher was presented with the complaint of non-ambulatory tetraparesis. Clinical and neurological examination revealed a caudal cervical spinal cord disfunction (C6-T2 spinal cord segments). Magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomographic (CT) findings of the cervical spine were consistent with caudal cervical spondylomyelopathy (CSM). During the diagnostic work-up for the cervical spine, bilateral bone anomalies involving the seventh cervical vertebra and the first ribs were found on radiographs and CT examination. The rib anomalies found in this dog appear similar to cervical ribs widely described in human medicine. In people, cervical ribs are associated with a high rate of stillbirth, early childhood cancer, and can cause the thoracic outlet syndrome, characterized by neurovascular compression at level of superior aperture of the chest. In dogs, only some sporadic anatomopathological descriptions of cervical ribs exist. In this report the radiographic and CT findings of these particular vertebral and rib anomalies along with their relationships with adjacent vasculature and musculature are shown intravitam in a dog. Specific radiographic and CT findings described in this report may help in reaching a presumptive diagnosis of this anomaly. Finally, their clinical and evolutionary significance are discussed.

 
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