Studies offer new hope for diagnosis of Chiari-malformation in toy dog breeds

(26.01.2017) Study identifies characteristics that cause painful Chiari malformation and Syringomyelia disorder in popular Cavalier King Charles Spaniel breed and will help vets identify dogs suffering from afflictions.

Novel brain-mapping techniques have been used to create movie clips helping vets identify subtle changes in skull and brain shapes in different breeds of dogs, giving researchers a greater insight into conditions.

Growing popularity of toy dogs has resulted in increased number of dogs suffering from Chiari malformations and Syringomyelia.

University of Surrey

Researchers from the University Of Surrey School Of Veterinary Medicine have made advances in the study of the Chiari malformation and Syringomyelia disorder in toy dogs.

Continuing to build on their specialist work in this area, researchers in collaboration with neurologists at Fitzpatrick Referrals and Helsinki University and a geneticist at the University of Montreal, have developed two separate studies, both published today in PLOS ONE, to learn more about these painful conditions affecting toy dogs.

Study one focused on how the Chiari malformation and Syringomyelia disorder affects the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, a breed which is predisposed to the condition.

Chiari malformation is the premature fusion of bones in the skull, which alters the flow of cerebrospinal fluid, resulting in a collection of fluid pockets within the spinal cord. These fluid pockets are commonly known as Syringomyelia and over time can cause irreversible damage to a dog’s spinal cord.

Using a novel MRI mapping technique, which can standardise images for different size dogs, researchers were able to examine a section of the dog’s skull, brain and vertebrae in greater detail and highlight via a movie clip how such disorders develop in the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel.

Examining the footage from the MRI movie clip, researchers were able to observe the compression of a dog’s brain caused by the premature fusion of bones in the skull. Such fusions also occur at the front of the head causing a dog’s face to become flatter, creating the often desirable doll like features common in this breed.

Study two examined characteristics that increased the risk of Syringomyelia in the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, Chihuahua and the Affenpinscher dog breeds. Using a similar technique to study one, the study found that skull and neck conformation that increased the risk for Syringomyelia associated with Chiari-like malformation were subtly different between breeds.

Researchers found that Syringomyelia-affected Chihuahua’s tended to have a smaller angle between the base of the skull and the first and second neck vertebrae, whereas the Affenpinshers had a smaller distance between the first and second vertebrae.

Cavalier King Charles Spaniels had reduced space between the joint on the skull base and the first cervical vertebrae. All breeds had a reduced hind skull which altered the angulation of the skull base with neighbouring bones in affected dogs and observed in the movie clips.

Dr Clare Rusbridge, from the University of Surrey, said: “Toy dogs are increasingly popular and as such demand for these breeds is unprecedented. Due to selection for rounded head shapes with short muzzles we are seeing more and more dogs with the painful Chiari malformation and Syringomyelia disorder.

“The innovative mapping technique used in this study has the potential to provide a diagnostic tool for vets, helping them to quickly identify dogs suffering from these painful disorders.”

The Cavalier spaniel research was funded primarily by Cavalier Matters Charity, Dogs Trust and BSAVA Petsavers.

Use of  morphometric mapping to characterise symptomatic Chiari-like malformation, secondary syringomyelia and associated brachycephaly in the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0169898

Craniometric analysis of the hindbrain and craniocervical junction of Chihuahua, Affenpinscher dogs with and without syringomyelia secondary to Chiari-like Malformation 
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0170315



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