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1 March 2016 PROGRESSIVE SYRINGOHYDROMYELIA AND DEGENERATIVE AXONOPATHY IN A BOBCAT (LYNX RUFUS) FOLLOWING SURGICAL CORRECTION OF A CHIARI-LIKE MALFORMATION
Ryan Sadler, Juergen Schumacher, Edward Ramsay, Brynn McCleery, Katherine Baine, William Thomas, Michelle Nobrega-Lee, George A. Henry, Shelley J. Newman
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Abstract

A 3-yr-old male captive bobcat (Lynx rufus) presented with chronic ataxia and right-sided head tilt. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed cerebellar crowding and compression consistent with Chiari-like malformation. The clinical signs did not improve after surgical occipital craniectomy, and 2 mo postoperatively a second MRI showed hydromyelia and continued cerebellar compression. The bobcat was euthanized, and necropsy showed chronic focal cerebellar herniation and chronic multifocal atlanto-occipital joint osteophyte proliferation. Histology confirmed the presence of a thick fibrous membrane along the caudal aspect of the cerebellar vermis, suggestive of postoperative adhesions, and axonal degeneration of the cervical spinal cord, even in sections without a central canal lesion. These lesions appear to have been complications associated with surgical correction of the Chiari-like malformation.

Copyright 2016 by American Association of Zoo Veterinarians
Ryan Sadler, Juergen Schumacher, Edward Ramsay, Brynn McCleery, Katherine Baine, William Thomas, Michelle Nobrega-Lee, George A. Henry, and Shelley J. Newman "PROGRESSIVE SYRINGOHYDROMYELIA AND DEGENERATIVE AXONOPATHY IN A BOBCAT (LYNX RUFUS) FOLLOWING SURGICAL CORRECTION OF A CHIARI-LIKE MALFORMATION," Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 47(1), 329-332, (1 March 2016). https://doi.org/10.1638/2014-0149.1
Received: 4 September 2014; Published: 1 March 2016
KEYWORDS
bobcat
Chiari-like malformation
Lynx rufus
syringohydromyelia
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