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Polyneuropathy in young Siberian Huskies caused by degenerative and inflammatory diseases
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Polyneuropathy in young Siberian Huskies caused by degenerative and inflammatory diseases

Hanne Jahns, Karen M Vernau, Catherine M. Nolan, Emma J. O'Neill, Robert E. Shiel and G Diane Shelton
Veterinary pathology, Vol.57(5), pp.666-674
2020
PMID: 32578500

Abstract

Animals Demyelinating Diseases Dog Diseases - genetics Dog Diseases - pathology Dogs Esophageal Achalasia - pathology Esophageal Achalasia - veterinary Female Genetic Predisposition to Disease Genetic Variation Inflammation - pathology Inflammation - veterinary Male Mutation Peripheral Nerves - pathology Polyneuropathies - genetics Polyneuropathies - pathology Polyneuropathies - veterinary Vocal Cord Paralysis - pathology Vocal Cord Paralysis - veterinary
Polyneuropathy is defined as the simultaneous dysfunction of several peripheral nerves. In dogs, a number of breeds are predisposed to a variety of immune-mediated and/or degenerative inherited forms of polyneuropathy, with laryngeal paralysis and/or megaesophagus as important clinical features of many of these conditions. This case series describes degenerative and inflammatory polyneuropathies in 7 young Siberian huskies that were categorized based on clinicopathological characteristics as follows: (1) slowly progressive laryngeal paralysis and megaesophagus caused by primary axonal degeneration with large fiber loss (n = 2); (2) slowly progressive polyneuropathy without megaesophagus or laryngeal paralysis caused by primary axonal degeneration with large fiber loss (n = 2); (3) acute inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy causing sensory, motor and autonomic nerve deficits (n = 2); and (4) ganglioradiculitis (sensory neuronopathy; n = 1). Based on the predominantly young age at onset, slow progression, relatedness of affected dogs, and clinical and pathological similarities with inherited neuropathies reported in other dog breeds, a hereditary basis for the degenerative polyneuropathies in Siberian huskies is suspected. However, 5 different mutations in 3 genes known to cause polyneuropathy in other dog breeds (NDRG1, ARHGEF10, or RAB3GAP1) were not detected in the affected Siberian huskies suggesting that more genetic variants remain to be identified. This study highlights the varied underlying lesions of polyneuropathies in young Siberian huskies.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.253 Nerve Disorders
1.253.1972 Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease
Web Of Science research areas
Pathology
Veterinary Sciences
ESI research areas
Plant & Animal Science
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