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Severe Involvement of Cerebral Neopallidum in a Dog with Hepatic Encephalopathy
11
Citations
11
References
2004
Year
Cerebral NeopallidumPathologyNeuroinflammationAlzheimer's DiseaseHepatic EncephalopathyCerebrospinal FluidBrain InjuryNeurologyBrain PathologyNeuropathologyNeuroimmunologyVeterinary PathologySmall Animal Internal MedicineCerebral Blood FlowGlutamate Transporter AntibodiesSevere InvolvementNeuroanatomyVeterinary ScienceUnique DistributionNeuroscienceMedicine
This report describes a unique distribution of cerebral cortical necrotic lesion, which was diagnosed as hepatic encephalopathy in a 2-year-old Maltese dog. The dog showed splenocaval shunt and small liver with marked hepatocellular fatty degeneration. Histopathologic examination revealed that diffuse laminar cortical necrosis composed of neuronal necrosis, marked infiltration of gitter macrophages, and astrogliosis were found bilaterally in the dorsolateral area of the cerebrum. No necrotic lesions were observed in the cerebral paleopallium and archipallium, the central gray matter, cerebellum, and brain stem. Astrocytes with large and pale nuclei (Alzheimer type II astrocytes) were apparent throughout the brain. Immunohistochemically, a decrease of immunostains for glutamine synthetase and glutamate transporter antibodies was seen in Alzheimer type II astrocytes and neuropil. This is, to our knowledge, the first report of extensive involvement of cerebral neopallidum in canine hepatic encephalopathy.
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