Abstract

Cervical spinal disease is one of the most common neurological disorders in small-breed dogs. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a common test for dogs with cervical spinal diseases. However, there is no information on cervical spinal canal and cord using MRI in normal small-breed dogs. Therefore, this study aimed to perform analyses to establish morphologic MRI reference ranges of the cervical spinal canal and cord in normal small-breed dogs. Cervical MRI examinations were taken in 20 client-owned small dogs. The height, width, and cross-sectional area (CSA) of the spinal canal and cord were measured on sagittal and transverse T2-weighted images at each vertebral body level and each intervertebral disk level from C1–C2 to C7 (a total of 12 levels). The height ratio, the width ratio, and the CSA ratio were calculated. The height, width, and CSA of the spinal canal and cord increased as the dog's weight increased (p < 0.01), except for that at C1–C2. However, there was no correlation between the body weight and height ratio and the width ratio and CSA ratio at all levels, except for that at C1–C2. Also, there was a negative correlation between the body weight and CSA ratio at C1–C2. There were no statistical differences for the CSA of the spinal canal, the CSA of the spinal cord, and the CSA ratio between nearby levels, except for that at C1–C2. There was no statistical difference between measurements at each same level of the sagittal and transverse images. The results of this study may provide basic and morphometric information for diagnosing and researching cervical spinal diseases in small-breed dogs.

Highlights

  • Cervical spinal disease is one of the most common neurological disorders in small-breed dogs

  • C1–C2 showed the largest width of the spinal canal and cord and cross-sectional area (CSA) of the spinal canal compared to those of other levels; their roundness indices were the smallest, as well as the CSA ratio

  • There were no statistical differences in the CSA of the spinal canal, the CSA of the spinal cord, and the CSA ratio between nearby levels, except for those of C1–C2

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Summary

Introduction

Cervical spinal disease is one of the most common neurological disorders in small-breed dogs. Previous studies have evaluated the anatomic and quantitative qualities of the cervical spinal canal or spinal cord in normal dogs using radiography, computed tomography (CT), and CT myelography [6,7,8,9,10]. There have been a few previous studies on the morphometric or quantitative analysis of the cervical spinal region using MRI, but these only focused on specific large breeds and diseases [12,13,14,15]. One study provided the normal heights of the spinal cord and canal in small to large dogs, but only the sagittal height was measured and the report did not investigate the cervical region [16]. There was a comparative study between small-breed dogs and specific large-breed dogs, but it did not evaluate the entire cervical spine and was not a study in normal small-breed dogs [17]

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