ABSTRACT
After being anaesthetised for between one hour 40 minutes and seven hours, five adult horses developed acute neurological signs and extensive cerebrocortical necrosis. Four of them had had abdominal surgery for colic and one had had repeated orthopaedic interventions. Between five hours and seven days after the surgery, all five horses suddenly developed severe signs of a predominantly prosencephalic disturbance: bilateral blindness with normal pupillary light responses, abnormal behaviour varying from propulsive pacing to head pressing profound lethargy and generalised seizures. They were euthanased between 24 hours and three weeks after the onset of these signs. In three of the cases a gross examination of the brain revealed patchy malacia of the cerebral grey matter and some discolouration of the adjacent white matter. Microscopical examination revealed lesions that varied from laminar neuronal necrosis in the grey matter of the cerebral cortex to more diffuse necrosis of the cortex and underlying white matter. Four of the five cases had had a period of hypercapnea while anaesthetised, and two of them (and possibly a third) had also had hypoxaemia.
Subject(s)
Anesthesia/veterinary , Brain Diseases/veterinary , Horse Diseases/pathology , Anesthesia/adverse effects , Animals , Brain Diseases/etiology , Brain Diseases/pathology , Female , Horse Diseases/etiology , Horses , Male , Necrosis , Postoperative Period , Retrospective StudiesSubject(s)
Angiomatosis/veterinary , Cat Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Spinal Diseases/veterinary , Thoracic Vertebrae/diagnostic imaging , Angiomatosis/diagnostic imaging , Angiomatosis/surgery , Animals , Cat Diseases/surgery , Cats , Female , Laminectomy/veterinary , Spinal Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Spinal Diseases/surgery , Thoracic Vertebrae/pathology , Thoracic Vertebrae/surgery , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/veterinary , Treatment OutcomeABSTRACT
A 13-yr-old female Canada lynx (Felis lynx canadensis) died after a short clinical illness, and necropsy revealed multifocal, nonsuppurative encephalitis with protozoal schizonts present in cerebral vascular endothelial cells. The schizonts stained immunohistochemically with antiserum to Sarcocystis neurona. This is the first report of Sarcocystis encephalitis in the Canada lynx.