Transcript Slide 1

Micah’s Mystery: A Case of
Seizures in a Golden Retriever
Ashley D. Justice
Meet Micah
• 11 year old intact male Golden Retriever
• Agility Champion
• Presented to Auburn’s neurology service on
8/18/09 due to recent onset of seizure
activity.
History
• No previous history of seizures
• No other medical conditions other than
hypothyroidism.
• First seizure activity on 6/13/09
• Transported to emergency clinic
• Micah was placed on phenobarbital (63.8 mg
tablet BID)
History cont.
• Micah was weaned off of the medication, then
suffered another seizure a week later
(8/9/09).
• Controlled with rectal diazepam
• Micah was placed back on the phenobarb
• rDVM tested for E.canis, Lyme disease, RMSF
Physical Examination
• Bright, Alert, Responsive
• Temperature, pulse, and respirations were all
within normal limits.
• No significant abnormalities found
Neurologic Examination
• Mental status: normal
• Gait and Posture: normal with the exception
of a slightly abnormal rear limb gait
• Slight, intermittent right head tilt was present,
otherwise, all cranial nerves WNL
• Spinal reflexes: WNL
• Postural reactions: WNL
Seizures
• Definition: the clinical manifestation of an
excessive discharge of hyperexcitable
cerebrocortical neurons.
• Generalized, simple partial, or complex partial
• Brief/isolated vs. Cluster
• Micah: generalized
Pathophysiology
• Imbalance between normal excitability and
inhibitory mechanisms due to an intra or
extra cranial disease process.
Seizure Classification
• Primary epileptic seizures
– 44%- no identifiable cause of seizure activity
– Large breed dogs
– 1-5 yrs. (most initial episodes are from 6 mo.-3
yrs)
– Longer inter-ictal period (>4 wks)
– Generalized motor seizures
– Considered familial or inherited
Seizure Classification
• Secondary epileptic seizures
– 46% - animal has an identifiable intracranial
abnormality
– Bimodal onset- <1 yr. or >7yr.
– Partial seizures included
– First seizure is usually between midnight and 8
am.
– Many etiologies
Seizure Classification
• Reactive epileptic seizures
– 10%
– Metabolic, toxic, or other noxious insult capable
of inducing seizures.
– Most likely when inter-ictal period is <4 wks.
– Most involve organ or endocrine disease.
– All ages
– Many etiologies
Initial Treatment
• When to treat
– >1 seizure in a 24 hour period
– >1 seizure every 6 weeks
– History of status or clusters
– Judgement call
• Goal: to reduce the seizure frequency to less
than one single seizure every 6-8 weeks ASAP.
• Potassium Bromide and Phenobarbital are the
most common treatment options.
KBr vs. Phenobarb
• KBr -• Dosage: 40-50 mg/kg q24 (lower dose when used as an
adjunct)
• Contraindication: renal insufficiency
• Ensure stable dietary chloride intake
• Side effects: ataxia, lethargy, PU/PD
• Phenobarb -• Dosage: 2.5-4 mg/kg q12
– If seizures are occurring at intervals of less than 7 days, initiate
PB therapy with an IV loading dose of 15-25 mg/kg.
– Measure levels in 2 wks. (target level is 20-45 mcg/ml)
• Contraindication: liver disease
Other considerations
• Only if no seizures have occurred in 6-12 months,
consider slowly weaning over a period of a few
months.
• Do not administer drugs that interfere with the
metabolism of PB:
– Chloramphenicol, cimetidine, ranitidine, and
tetracyclines.
• Do not administer drugs which may lower the
seizure threshold:
– Ace, xylazine, ketamine, estrogens, tricyclic
antidepressants, bronchodilators.
Initial Diagnostics
• CBC, Serum chemistries, Urinalysis- no significant
abnormalities.
• 3 view thoracic radiographs- WNL
• Titers for RMSF, E.canis, Neospora, Distemper,
Toxoplasma- RMSF again mildly elevated, but
likely represents previous exposure or exposure
to a non-pathogenic strain. Distemper borderline
increased, but probably not clinically significant.
• Brain MRI
MRI results
2
7/14
4
12
Intracranial Tumors
• Seizures could be the result of expansile
growth or peri-tumoral effects (edema,
compromised blood flow)
• Rarely disseminate throughout the CNS by
hematogenous or CSF routes.
• Incidence: 14.5 in 100,000
Types of Intracranial Tumors
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Astrocytic tumors
Oligodendroglial tumors
Ependymal cell tumors
Mixed gliomas
Tumors of the Meninges
Treatment Plan
• Continue with the current drug regimen
(phenobarb, saloxine)
• Discharge (8/19/09) to return on 8/25/09 for
brain surgery.
8/25/09
• Micah returns to Auburn for brain surgery
• Bright, alert, and responsive with no seizure
activity noted by owner.
Surgical Considerations
• Intracranial pressure dynamics is the most
important consideration for the patient prior
to performing a craniotomy.
• Monroe-Kellie Doctrine: the contents of the
cranial vault are blood, CSF, and parenchymaan increase in any of these 3 results in a net
decrease in the other 2 components.
Surgical Considerations (cont.)
• Pre-operative steroid administration
– Dexamethasone: to reduce edema and CSF production
– Sodium prednisolone succinate or methyl
prednisolone succinate- antiinflammatory and tissue
protective as oxygen free radical scavengers and
stabilizers of the lysosomal membranes.
– Micah: solu-delta cortef
• Prophylactic antibiotic usage
– To decrease CNS bacterial contamination
– Micah: cefazolin
Craniectomy
• Sternal recumbency
• Transfrontal approach
Post-operative
• Critical care
• Monitoring:
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Check heart rate, respirations, and blood pressure every two hours.
Flip sides every four hours, as well as ice pack incision every 4 hours.
NPO
LRS- 70 ml/hr
• Medications:
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Cefazolin
Lasix
Buprenorphine
Phenobarb
Levothyroxine
Midazolam
Domitor
Famotidine
Post-operative
• Walked outside with assistance day 1
• NPO
• Began offering food on day 2 and switched to
oral antibiotic and pain control
• Spiked a fever on day 3 but was controlled
easily, received surgical histopathology results
• Gradually increased food intake and walking
distance
Meningioma
• Most frequent CNS tumor seen in vet med
• MST
– Surgical excision followed by radiation therapy- 16 mo.
– Surgical excision alone- 11 mo.
– No treatment- variable – could be weeks to months.
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Breed predilection: dolicocephalic
Age predilection: mature adults
Behavior- generally benign
Location: usually solitary
– Cerebrum> cerebellum> spinal cord>ventricles
August 30, 2009- Micah goes home!
Recheck-9/14/09
• BAR, incision healing nicely
• Neurologic examination- inconsistent right eye
menace response and droopy right eyelid
• Owner reported Micah to be weak in his rear
limbs
• Pretreatment CT for radiation therapy
10/2/09
• Micah is receiving his 13th of 16 fractions of
radiation today.
• He is doing great with no abnormalities thus
far!
Thank You…..
•God
•Family
•Micah
•Dr. Ortinau and
Dr.Shores
•Class of 2010
•Gran 1932-2009
Phil. 4:13- “I can do all things
through Christ who gives me
strength.”