1.Pathology of non-thermal irreversible electroporation (N-TIRE)-induced ablation of the canine brain.
John H ROSSMEISL ; Paulo A GARCIA ; John L ROBERSTON ; Thomas L ELLIS ; Rafael V DAVALOS
Journal of Veterinary Science 2013;14(4):433-440
This study describes the neuropathologic features of normal canine brain ablated with non-thermal irreversible electroporation (N-TIRE). The parietal cerebral cortices of four dogs were treated with N-TIRE using a dose-escalation protocol with an additional dog receiving sham treatment. Animals were allowed to recover following N-TIRE ablation and the effects of treatment were monitored with clinical and magnetic resonance imaging examinations. Brains were subjected to histopathologic and ultrastructural assessment along with Bcl-2, caspase-3, and caspase-9 immunohistochemical staining following sacrifice 72 h post-treatment. Adverse clinical effects of N-TIRE were only observed in the dog treated at the upper energy tier. MRI and neuropathologic examinations indicated that N-TIRE ablation resulted in focal regions of severe cytoarchitectural and blood-brain-barrier disruption. Lesion size correlated to the intensity of the applied electrical field. N-TIRE-induced lesions were characterized by parenchymal necrosis and hemorrhage; however, large blood vessels were preserved. A transition zone containing parenchymal edema, perivascular inflammatory cuffs, and reactive gliosis was interspersed between the necrotic focus and normal neuropil. Apoptotic labeling indices were not different between the N-TIRE-treated and control brains. This study identified N-TIRE pulse parameters that can be used to safely create circumscribed foci of brain necrosis while selectively preserving major vascular structures.
Animals
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Brain/metabolism/*pathology/surgery/ultrastructure
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Caspase 3/metabolism
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Caspase 9/metabolism
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Dogs
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Electroporation/veterinary
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods
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Microscopy, Electron, Transmission
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Necrosis/metabolism/pathology
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Neurosurgical Procedures/*adverse effects
2.CT myelography of the thoraco-lumbar spine in 8 dogs with degenerative myelopathy.
Jeryl C JONES ; Karen D INZANA ; John H ROSSMEISL ; Robert L BERGMAN ; Tana WELLS ; Katherine BUTLER
Journal of Veterinary Science 2005;6(4):341-348
CT myelography of the T11-L2 region was performed in 8 large-breed dogs with a clinical diagnosis of degenerative myelopathy (DM) and 3 large-breed dogs that were clinically normal. CT myelographic characteristics were recorded for each dog, at each disc level. Area measurements of the spinal cord, dural sac, vertebral canal, and vertebral body were recorded at 4 slice locations for each disc level. Mean area ratios were calculated and graphically compared, by slice location and group. In all dogs, CT myelography identified morphologic abnormalities that were not suspected from conventional myelograms. Characteristics observed with higher frequency in DM versus normal dogs were: spinal stenosis, disc protrusion, focal attenuation of the subarachnoid space, spinal cord deformity, small spinal cord, and paraspinal muscle atrophy. Mean spinal cord: dural sac, spinal cord: vertebral canal, dural sac: vertebral canal, and vertebral canal:vertebral body ratios were smaller in DM versus normal dogs at more than one disc level. Some CT myelographic characteristics in DM dogs were similar to those previously reported in humans, dogs and horses with stenotic myelopathy.
Animals
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Dog Diseases/*radiography
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Dogs
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Female
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Lumbar Vertebrae/radiography
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Male
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Myelography/*veterinary
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Spinal Cord Diseases/radiography/*veterinary
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Thoracic Vertebrae/radiography
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed/*veterinary
3.Effect of multi-planar CT image reformatting on surgeon diagnostic performance for localizing thoracolumbar disc extrusions in dogs.
Jason B KING ; Jeryl C JONES ; John H ROSSMEISL ; Tisha A HARPER ; Otto I LANZ ; Stephen R WERRE
Journal of Veterinary Science 2009;10(3):225-232
Accurate pre-operative localization and removal of disc material are important for minimizing morbidity in dogs with thoracolumbar disc extrusions. Computed tomography (CT) is an established technique for localizing disc extrusions in dogs, however the effect of multi-planar reformatting (MPR) on surgeon diagnostic performance has not been previously described. The purpose of this study was to test the effect of MPR CT on surgeon diagnostic accuracy, certainty and agreement for localizing thoracolumbar disc extrusions in dogs. Two veterinary surgeons and one veterinary neurologist who were unaware of surgical findings independently reviewed randomized sets of two-dimensional (2D) and MPR CT images from 111 dogs with confirmed thoracolumbar disc extrusions. For each set of images, readers recorded their localizations for extruded disc material and their diagnostic certainty. For MPR images, readers also recorded views they considered most helpful. Diagnostic accuracy estimates, mean diagnostic certainty scores and inter-observer agreement were compared using surgery as the gold standard. Frequencies were compared for MPR views rated most helpful. Diagnostic accuracy estimates were significantly greater for MPR vs. 2D CT images in one reader. Mean diagnostic certainty scores were significantly greater for MPR images in two readers. The change in agreement between 2D and MPR images differed from zero for all analyses (site, side, number affected) among all three readers. Multi-planar views rated most helpful with the highest frequency were oblique transverse and curved dorsal planar MPR views. Findings from this study indicate that multi-planar CT can improve surgeon diagnostic performance for localizing canine thoracolumbar disc extrusions.
Animals
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Decision Making
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Dog Diseases/*radiography
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Dogs
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Female
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Humans
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Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/*methods/standards
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Intervertebral Disk Displacement/radiography/*veterinary
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Male
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Observer Variation
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed