Two-Year Follow-Up Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Spectroscopy Findings and Cerebrospinal Fluid Analysis of a Dog with Sandhoff's Disease.
Daisuke ItoC IshikawaN D JefferyK OnoM TsuboiK UchidaO YamatoM KitagawaPublished in: Journal of veterinary internal medicine (2018)
A 13-month-old female Toy Poodle was presented for progressive ataxia and intention tremors of head movement. The diagnosis of Sandhoff's disease (GM2 gangliosidosis) was confirmed by deficient β-N-acetylhexosaminidase A and B activity in circulating leukocytes and identification of the homozygous mutation (HEXB: c.283delG). White matter in the cerebrum and cerebellum was hyperintense on T2-weighted and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery magnetic resonance images. Over the next 2 years, the white matter lesions expanded, and bilateral lesions appeared in the cerebellum and thalamus, associated with clinical deterioration. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed progressive decrease in brain N-acetylaspartate, and glycine-myo-inositol and lactate-alanine were increased in the terminal clinical stage. The concentrations of myelin basic protein and neuron specific enolase in cerebrospinal fluid were persistently increased. Imaging and spectroscopic appearance correlated with histopathological findings of severe myelin loss in cerebral and cerebellar white matter and destruction of the majority of cerebral and cerebellar neurons.
Keyphrases
- white matter
- multiple sclerosis
- cerebrospinal fluid
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- contrast enhanced
- high resolution
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- early onset
- spinal cord
- molecular docking
- deep learning
- computed tomography
- convolutional neural network
- single molecule
- brain injury
- peripheral blood
- small molecule
- machine learning
- protein protein
- spinal cord injury
- case report
- wild type
- resting state