Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira (Nov 2024)

Compressive lesions of the central nervous system in goats and sheep: A retrospective study of 11 cases in the Amazon biome

  • Camila C. Barbosa,
  • Cinthia T.A. Lopes,
  • Tatiane T.A. Ferreira,
  • Carlos M.C. Oliveira,
  • Karinny F. Campos,
  • Henrique A. Bomjardim,
  • Marilene F. Brito,
  • José D. Barbosa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-5150-pvb-7418
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44

Abstract

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ABSTRACT: This paper describes, within the framework of a retrospective study, the epidemiological and clinicopathological findings in goats and sheep with compressive lesions of the central nervous system (CNS) in Pará. This study included eight sheep and three goats from 2005 to 2022 by reviewing the clinical files of animals with CNS compressive lesions managed by the team of the Carlos Tokarnia Veterinary Hospital of the Institute of Veterinary Medicine of the Federal University of Pará. The animals with clinical signs were subjected to a general and specific clinical examination of the nervous system. All animals included in the study were necropsied, and the clinical signs were found to vary according to the location of the lesion. At necropsy, changes such as an abscess with osteomyelitis of the vertebral body with pathologic fracture and spinal cord compression, submeningeal abscess in the skull floor, subarachnoid hematoma, and congenital bone changes causing spinal cord compression and ankylosing spondylitis were noted. These findings indicate that a comprehensive clinical examination of the CNS in conjunction with necropsy findings is essential to characterize the clinical picture, localize the lesion, and determine the cause of the disease. The most affected medullary segment was between T3 and L3. Therefore, these diseases should be included in the list of differential diagnoses in farm animals with nervous system symptoms.

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