Difference between revisions of "Joints Degenerative - Pathology"

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===Disc protrusion===
+
===[[Disc Protrusion]]===
[[Image:Intervertebral disc degeneration.jpg|right|thumb|100px|<small><center>Intervertebral disc degeneration (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)</center></small>]]
 
*Occurs mainly in dogs
 
*Almost always '''dorsal''' protrusion due to eccentric position of [[Joints - Anatomy & Physiology#Fibrocartilagenous joints|''nucleus pulposus'']]
 
*Main sites are '''cervical and lumbar''' regions
 
**Thoracic vertebrae have [[Joints - Anatomy & Physiology#Fibrocartilagenous joints|conjugal ligaments]]
 
*Degeneration precedes protrusion (two patterns):
 
**'''Chondroid'''
 
***In chondrodystrophic breeds
 
***Concurrent calcification of [[Intervertebral disc degeneration|degenerated ''nucleus pulposus'']]
 
***Progressive loosening and fragmentation of overlying ''annulus fibrosis'' fibres
 
****Damaged by both compressive and rotational forces
 
***Predisposing degeneration of the discs occurs by one year of age in most of the dogs
 
***Protrusion usually occurs in males, 3-6 years of age
 
***'''Sudden complete protrusion''' -> severe damage to spinal cord in the area
 
***Widespread necrosis and haemorrhage
 
***Extruded material is gritty, hemorrhagic or “cheesy”
 
**'''Fibroid'''
 
***In non-chondrodystrophic breeds, horses, pigs
 
***Usually occurs later in life
 
***Pathogenesis:
 
****Progressive dehydration and collagenisation of ''nucleus pulposus''
 
****Fraying and fragmentation of lamellar ''annulus fibrosis'' fibres
 
**** -> Attempts to repair by fibrosis
 
**** -> Weak area in the annulus
 
**** -> '''Partial protrusion''' (rarely may calcify) of nucleus into spinal canal
 
*****May be dorsal or lateral
 
**** -> Pressure on spinal cord
 
**** -> Demyelination of white matter
 
**** -> Progressive weakness of structures innervated distally to the lesion
 
***Disk material may enter blood vessels causing fibrocartilagenous embolism
 
****May present without any disk symptoms
 
 
 
 
 
*'''Sudden protrusion''' can occur in any breed due to traumatic compression of spinal cord
 
 
 
[[Category:Joints - Degenerative Pathology]]
 
  
 
===Cervical spinal stenosis===
 
===Cervical spinal stenosis===

Revision as of 15:40, 3 March 2011

Degenerative Joint Disease

==

Patellar Luxation

Atlantoaxial Luxation

Temporomandibular Luxation

Calve Legg-Perthe's Disease

Degenerative Arthropathy

Joint Trauma

Nutritional diseases

Hypervitaminosis A

Disc Protrusion

Cervical spinal stenosis

  • Usually funnel-shaped
  • Stenosis in dorso-ventral plane
  • May occur at more than one site
  • Predisposed in some breeds: Great Dane, Doberman, Basset Hound, Irish Wolfhound, Old English Sheepdog
  • Clinical signs: cervical pain -> ataxia -> quadriplegia


Cervicospinal arthropathy

  • = "Wobbler" in horses
  • Usually presents in first two years of life
  • Mainly in fast growing thouroughbreds
  • Most common site is C3-C4, can occur anywhere
  • Abnormal laxity between the vertebrae + cervical vertebral malformation may be evident
  • Osteophyte formation at edges of synovial components of joint
  • Some due to stenosis of neural canal later in life (1-4 years of age)
  • Clinical signs:
    • Ataxia - hindlimbs more affected
  • Presumed cause is rapid growth


Spondylosis

Spondylosis (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)
  • Often in bulls and dogs, occurs also in horses, cats and pigs
  • Osteophyte formation on ventral aspect of vertebrae
    • Often around lumbar region
    • Adjacent to intervertebral spaces
    • Varies in size - small spurs -> 'bridges' between vertebrae
    • May extend over few vertebrae
  • Pathogenesis:
  • In dogs usually no symptoms
  • In bulls may cause inability to mount
  • In severe cases repeated damage may progress to recurrent posterior weakness and ataxia in conjuction with fractures of spondylitic and vertebral bone


Cranial cruciate ligament rupture

  • Autoantibodies against collagens seen in the joint fluid – no relationship to the disease (ie: not an autoimmune disease) – can be seen in any joint disease


Steroid arthropathy

  • From glucocorticoids injected into joint as antiinflammatories
  • Injection sometimes causes rapid progression of degeneration
  • Glucocortyicois suppress anabolic effect of chondrocytes -> reduction of cartilage matrix syhthesis -> proteoglycan depletion -> slower repair