Disease
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Pathology
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Clinical Signs
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Diagnosis
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Prognosis + Treatment
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Idiopathic Laryngeal Hemiplagia (ILH)
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- Progressive loss of fibres (esp. large diameter) within left recurrent laryngeal nerve compared to right
- Dying back axonopathy with myelin sheath involvement:
- Degenerating fibres
- Regenerating clusters
- De/Re-myelination
- Flattening of nerve between aorta & trachea
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- Inspiratory 'roaring' noise - flapping of vocal fold
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- 'Slap test' - adduction of contralateral arytenoid during expiration
- Endoscopic examination - assymetric arytenoids, poor abduction of left vocal fold.
- Palpable atrophy of laryngeal musculature
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- Laryngeal Ventriculectomy (Hobday procedure)
- 'Tie Back'
- Laryngeal muscle prosthesis
- Prognosis usually good
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Cauda Equina Neuritis
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- Equine version of Idiopathic polyradiculoneuritis
- Extradural nerve roots of cauda equina thickened and discoloured
- Inflammatory infiltrate (lymphocytes, plasma cells, macrophages)
- Extensive axonal damage and demyelination
- Cranial nerve involvement often occurs
- Aetiology unknown:
- Antecedent infection?
- Antibodies to PNS myelin?
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- Paralysis & anaesthesia of tail
- Urinary incontinence
- Loss of anal reflex
- Failure to defaecate
- Pain/hypersensitivity in gluteal/tail-head area
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- Recovery unlikely - most animals are destroyed.
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Stringhalt
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- Causes poorly understood - similar signs caused by sweat pea plant ingestion (lathyrism)
- Distal axonopathy (esp. large diameter fibres)
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- Abrupt onset continuous / intermittent hyperflexion of one or both hind limbs
- May also have ataxia, urinary incontinence, perineal flaccidity
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- Differential diagnosis : Upward fixation of patella
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- May get spontaneous recovery
- Move pasture
- Tenectomy of lateral digital extensor may help
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Equine Motor Neuron Disease
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- Weight Loss
- Muscle atrophy
- Generalised Weakness
- Short strided gait + narrow based stance
- Trembling
- Sweating and fasiculations
- Increased recumbency
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- Elevated CK
- CSF protein
- Denervation of EMG
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- May progress to constant recumbency (destroy), stabilise or improve
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Suprascapular Nerve Injury
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- "Sweeney"
- Commonly damaged by horse colliding into objects
- Fibrous entrapment as nerve reflected around wing of scapula
- Atrophy of supra- and infra- spinatous muscles
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- Lateral luxation of shoulder when weight bearing
- Muscle wasting around shoulder
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- No more than 30cm regrowth in 12 months expected due to irreversible muscle fibrosis.
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