Special Q9-12 Flashcards

1
Q

Name the 3 morphological groups of nasal area in dogs:

A

Dolichocephalic: nasal area is longer than cranium - greyhound
Mesaticephalic: nasal area is in equal length as cranium - labrador
Brachyocephalic: nasal area is shorter than cranium - boxer

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2
Q

Name projections of the nasal cavity for radiogram:

A

1) Laterolateral - lateral recumbency: dorsal nasal cavity, frontal sinuses, nasal + frontal bones
2) Lateral oblique view - jaws open, evaluate bullae, premolars and frontal sinuses
3) Lateral oblique view for temporomandibular joint - acc. head shape
4) Dorsoventral - standard, sternal recumbency
5) Ventrodorsal view - dorsal recumbency
6) Ventrodorsal oblique - bulla tympanica, foramen magnum
7) Rostrocaudal view - dorsal recumbency
8) Frontal view
9) Fronto-occipital view
10) Basilar view
11) Open mouth VD oblique view
12) Open mouth rostrocaudal view
13) Closed mouth, DV view with intraoral film placement
14) Closed mouth, VD view with intraoral film placement

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3
Q

Name pathologies of the nasal cavity:

A

Neoplasia - nasal tumour, destruction of turbinate bones, septum, walls of nasal chambers
Rhinitis - inflammation of nasal mucous membrane inside nose
Sinusitis - inflammation of the sinuses

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4
Q

Name pathologies of ear:

A

Otitis externa - unilateral narrowing of the ear canal, mineralization
Otitis media - air inside bulla tympanica is replaced with soft tissue opacity
Neoplasia - carcinoma at bullae tympanica or external ear canal
Otolithis - mineral opacities within the bulla tympanica

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4
Q

X-ray of the spine - position:

A
  • Perfectly aligned without axial rotation
  • may support mid-cervical and mid-lumbar vertebral segments
  • limit axial rotation
  • Beam: parallel to C3-4, T6-7, T-L junction, L3-14, L-S junction
  • Lateroventral view
  • Ventrodorsal
    – Dynamic or oblique view
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5
Q

Anatomy of the spine:

A

Spinal column divided into 5 segments:
- Vertebrae cervicales, thoracicae, lumbales, sacrales and caudales
- 7CV, 13TV, 7LV, 3S, 6-23Ca in car.
Body, arch, processus transversae and spinal, vertebral discs

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6
Q

Evaluation of the vertebras and spinal cord:

A

Carefully evaluate paraspinal structures
Count vertebrae in each anatomical region
Note general size
Dorsal and ventral alignment of the vertebral bodies
Disc-spaces: should be uniform width and opacity
Compare size and opacity of adjacent invertebral foramina
Note overall vertebral canal diameter of each body and adjacent IV disc space
Adjacent vertebrae should be approximately equal in size, shape and radiopacity

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7
Q

What is discospondylosis?

A

A bacterial infection of the intra-vertebral disc space.
Looks like a bridge between the two vertebrae.
Progressive bone proliferation occurs between ventral and lateral to IV spaces.

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8
Q

Characterize stress radiograms:

A

Intentionally putting stress on structures being radiographed.
- Flexed lateral view of upper cervical region to assess atlantoaxial subluxation
Also to view cervical stenotic spondylomyelopathy (Wobblers syndrome).

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9
Q

Luxation of the spine:

A

Displacement of a bone from a joint.
With or without fracture to the spine.
Can be accompanied by narrowing of the adjacent invertebral space.

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10
Q

Fracture of the spine:

A

Trauma
Primary site is the vertebral body
- abnormal spinal alignment and narrowing of adjacent IV disc space
Compression fractures - vertebrae appear smaller than normal and more radiopaque

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11
Q

The function of the invertebral discs are:

A

Shock-absorber

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12
Q

Anatomy of the invertebral discs:

A

Outer: fibrocartilaginous annulus fibrosus
Inner: gelatinuous nucleus pulposus

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13
Q

Pathologies of invertebral discs:

A

Protrusion - discs bulge into the vertebral canal
Bulging - nucleus pulposus stretches the annulus fibrosus
Extrusion - nucleus has broken through the annulus into epidural space

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14
Q

Degenerations of IV discs:

A

Hansen 1 and Hansen 2
- small dog breeds
- dehydration of nucleus pulposus cause disc degeneration, compress the spinal cord –> smaller epidural space –> disc protrusion

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15
Q

Characterize Hansen 1 degeneration of IV discs:

A

Chondroid metaplasia
- young, chondrodystrophic breeds (dachshund, beagle)
- dehydration of disc leading to granulation and mineralization of nucleus pulposus
- soft tissue radiopacity
- focal, ring like or whole nucleus

16
Q

Characterize Hansen 2 fibrous metaplasia:

A

Old, non-chondrodystrophic dog breeds and cats.
- protrusion, disc bulge into vertebral canal
- slow, chronic, mild neurological signs

17
Q

What is enchondrosis?

A

Invertebral disc calcification seen as radiopaque mineralization

18
Q

What is atlanto-axial instability?

A

An instability of the joint between the atlas and axis. The body of axis is pushed dorsally and cranially, compressing the spinal cord.
Cause: atlantoaxial subluxation, normally in small breeds.

19
Q

Radiological feature of atlanto-axial instability:

A

Cranial part of the spinous process of axis is displaced relative to the dorsal arch of atlas
Displacement is usually a few mm

20
Q

What is Wobbler syndrome?

A

Cervical stenotic spondylomyelopathy
Developmental abnormality in large-breed dogs (young-middle aged)
- Malformation, malarticulation or instability leading to compressionof lower cervical spine
- C4-5, C5-6, C6-7

21
Q

Wobbler’s syndrome is a combination of which 5 factors?

A

Disc protrusion
Vertebral subluxation
Vertebral malformation
Articular process joint enlargement
Compensatory ligamentous hypertrophy

22
Q

Radiological features of Wobblers syndrome:

A

Caudal cervical malformation
Malalignment of adjacent vertebrae
Narrowing of vertebral canal (stenosis)
Malformation of articular process
Remodelling changes (sclerosis, spondylosis)
Disc collapse

23
Q

What is hemivertebrae?

A

Malformation of the vertebral body.
Developmental abnormality of vertebrae, one side is incompletely developed.
Wedge (LL) or butterfly (VD) shaped.
Without clinical effects, occasionally leads to invertebral disc herniation, vertebral luxation, or spinal cord compression.

24
Q

Hemivertebrae can be further divided into:

A

Kyphosis - ventral part not developed
Scolliosis - lateral wall not developed
Lordosis - dorsal part is not developed