Abstract

A disorder of central nervous white matter in Norwegian-bred silver foxes is described from the case histories of 21 clinically affected foxes. The main presenting sign of this disorder was caudal limb ataxia, which appeared between 2 1/2 and 4 months of age and progressed over the next 4-8 weeks. Only four affected foxes were allowed to live beyond this period, but they showed moderate to marked improvement. Light microscopic examination of specimens from 16 affected foxes necropsied between 3 1/2 and 6 1/2 months of age revealed lesions that were restricted to the white matter of brain and spinal cord. The lesions were characterized by a symmetrical spongy change with vacuoles of varying sizes and included significant myelin deficiency. There was a relative preservation of axons and nerve cells and no significant inflammation or vascular reaction. An astrocytic hypertrophy was usually associated with the spongy change. Ultrastructural examination of central nervous tissue from two, perfusion-fixed, 6-month-old foxes showed intramyelin vacuoles resulting from splitting of the myelin lamellae at the intraperiod line and was interpreted as indicating myelin edema. Expanded extracellular spaces and watery astrocytic processes also contributed to the vacuolar appearance. Astrocytic processes in affected areas were hypertrophic and contained abundant filaments. Although the 16 silver foxes had severe clinical signs, their lesions had features in common with the juvenile form of Canavan's disease in children and a spongy degeneration reported in Labrador Retrievers; however, the clinical course in the foxes was not uniformly progressive.

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