Spontaneous nervous system concussion in dogs: a description of two cases and a review of terminology in veterinary medicine

In human medicine, central nervous system (CNS) concussion is defined as a transient neurological dysfunction following a traumatic event, without evidence of structural abnormalities of the affected region on advanced diagnostic imaging. Depending on the anatomical region involved, three forms of c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Angelo Pasquale Giannuzzi, Antonio De Simone, Mario Ricciardi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tripoli University 2017-11-01
Series:Open Veterinary Journal
Subjects:
Dog
Online Access:http://www.openveterinaryjournal.com/OVJ-2017-04-073%20A.P.%20Giannuzzi%20et%20al.pdf
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spelling doaj-8a2f79d069284a4abec761bf09bcec8e2021-10-02T03:27:56ZengTripoli UniversityOpen Veterinary Journal2218-60502218-60502017-11-0174306312http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ovj.v7i4.3Spontaneous nervous system concussion in dogs: a description of two cases and a review of terminology in veterinary medicineAngelo Pasquale Giannuzzi0Antonio De Simone1Mario Ricciardi2“Pingry” Veterinary Hospital, via Medaglie d’Oro 5, Bari, Italy“Pingry” Veterinary Hospital, via Medaglie d’Oro 5, Bari, Italy“Pingry” Veterinary Hospital, via Medaglie d’Oro 5, Bari, ItalyIn human medicine, central nervous system (CNS) concussion is defined as a transient neurological dysfunction following a traumatic event, without evidence of structural abnormalities of the affected region on advanced diagnostic imaging. Depending on the anatomical region involved, three forms of concussive syndromes are described: brain concussion, spinal concussion and cerebellar concussion. Although major textbooks of veterinary neurology admit the existence of canine brain concussion, spontaneous cases of this pathological condition have not been reported in small animals so far. This report describes two cases of concussion in dogs: a 9-month-old, intact male, shih-tzu with brain concussion; and a 10-month-old, intact male, poodle with cerebellar concussion. In addition, a brief review of the definition of the term “concussion” in the veterinary medical literature is provided, in comparison to its meaning in the human medical literature. Finally, this paper proposes an appropriate definition of “concussion” in dogs, that may facilitate clinicians in the recognition of such an elusive syndrome.http://www.openveterinaryjournal.com/OVJ-2017-04-073%20A.P.%20Giannuzzi%20et%20al.pdfBrainComputed tomographyConcussionDogMagnetic resonance imaging
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angelo Pasquale Giannuzzi
Antonio De Simone
Mario Ricciardi
spellingShingle Angelo Pasquale Giannuzzi
Antonio De Simone
Mario Ricciardi
Spontaneous nervous system concussion in dogs: a description of two cases and a review of terminology in veterinary medicine
Open Veterinary Journal
Brain
Computed tomography
Concussion
Dog
Magnetic resonance imaging
author_facet Angelo Pasquale Giannuzzi
Antonio De Simone
Mario Ricciardi
author_sort Angelo Pasquale Giannuzzi
title Spontaneous nervous system concussion in dogs: a description of two cases and a review of terminology in veterinary medicine
title_short Spontaneous nervous system concussion in dogs: a description of two cases and a review of terminology in veterinary medicine
title_full Spontaneous nervous system concussion in dogs: a description of two cases and a review of terminology in veterinary medicine
title_fullStr Spontaneous nervous system concussion in dogs: a description of two cases and a review of terminology in veterinary medicine
title_full_unstemmed Spontaneous nervous system concussion in dogs: a description of two cases and a review of terminology in veterinary medicine
title_sort spontaneous nervous system concussion in dogs: a description of two cases and a review of terminology in veterinary medicine
publisher Tripoli University
series Open Veterinary Journal
issn 2218-6050
2218-6050
publishDate 2017-11-01
description In human medicine, central nervous system (CNS) concussion is defined as a transient neurological dysfunction following a traumatic event, without evidence of structural abnormalities of the affected region on advanced diagnostic imaging. Depending on the anatomical region involved, three forms of concussive syndromes are described: brain concussion, spinal concussion and cerebellar concussion. Although major textbooks of veterinary neurology admit the existence of canine brain concussion, spontaneous cases of this pathological condition have not been reported in small animals so far. This report describes two cases of concussion in dogs: a 9-month-old, intact male, shih-tzu with brain concussion; and a 10-month-old, intact male, poodle with cerebellar concussion. In addition, a brief review of the definition of the term “concussion” in the veterinary medical literature is provided, in comparison to its meaning in the human medical literature. Finally, this paper proposes an appropriate definition of “concussion” in dogs, that may facilitate clinicians in the recognition of such an elusive syndrome.
topic Brain
Computed tomography
Concussion
Dog
Magnetic resonance imaging
url http://www.openveterinaryjournal.com/OVJ-2017-04-073%20A.P.%20Giannuzzi%20et%20al.pdf
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AT marioricciardi spontaneousnervoussystemconcussionindogsadescriptionoftwocasesandareviewofterminologyinveterinarymedicine
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