Lumbosacral Stenosis
(Cauda Equina)

Oudry,
Jean-Bapiste (1686-1775); 1723
Image courtesy PicturesNOW!.
As our
greyhounds age, quite a few of them, especially the males, become weak, wobbly,
and/or painful in the rear end. Many of these are affected by lumbosacral
stenosis (LS), a narrowing of the last part of the spinal canal, which causes
compression of the nerve roots.
Signs are
rear end pain, lameness, weakness, "shuffling," knuckling over, foot
dragging, and muscle wasting. Both urinary and fecal incontinence are possible
and carry a worse prognosis. Greyhounds may even lose their appetite from the
pain and "waste away."
The
difficulty in diagnosing LS is twofold. Many veterinarians simply do not
recognize the signs. LS looks neurologic, and technically, it is. But a rare and
obscure neurological disease, it is not. Beware a diagnosis of "hip
dysplasia" in a greyhound - greyhound hips are by and large excellent. The
second problem is that unless your greyhound is "lucky" enough to have
visible arthritis on lumbosacral x-rays, the only techniques to confirm LS are
pretty high tech - CT, MRI, discography, etc.
Not only
can LS be difficult to "nail down," the other problem is that oral
medications such as Rimadyl, Etogesic, glucosamine, aspirin, prednisone, etc. do
little for LS since it is not arthritis, but rather, "doggy sciatica"
i.e., pinching of the nerve roots.. It presents a sad problem. The
"cure" is referral spinal surgery to free up the trapped nerve roots,
not something many owners will consider in a geriatric greyhound. Many if not
most greyhounds simply get worse and worse until euthanasia becomes necessary.
The good
news is that there is a simple palpation technique to detect LS and a way to
inject Depo-Medrol intralesionally to help it, similar to what is done in
humans. It was taught to me by Dr. Mike Herron, a professor of small animal
orthopedic surgery at Texas A & M for 32 years, owner of racing greyhounds,
and all around "greyhound guru." You may want to clip this out for
your vet to see should one of your greyhounds begin showing signs of LS.
This
is an easy procedure that you do with the dog standing up, basically an
intramuscular injection into the lumbosacral area. There is absolutely no danger
of hitting the spinal cord or any important structures. The worst thing that can
happen is that it doesn't help the dog.
******************
First, look
at the diagram to see where the L-S joint lies in relation to the iliac crests
so that you hit the right spot both with your thumbs for palpating and with the
needle for injecting.

Put all
your fingers on the ventral ridge of the greyhound's iliac crest. Put each thumb
just medial to each iliac crest about halfway down its ridge. Your thumbs should
be between the iliac crest and the vertebrae. Be sure to look at the diagram so
you can see where the L-S joint lies in relation to the iliac crests. Try to
"crack" (move) the L-S joint. If it hurts (or he falls to the
ground!), chances are he has LS.
Draw up 20
mg of Depo-Medrol and using a 1" needle, inject half of this into each
side. Go about halfway down the ridge of the iliac crest, go in (medially)
1", and inject just off the midline (this is where you put your thumbs to
try to "crack" the L-S joint).
If the
greyhound does not show improvement within 48 hours, the problem is something
else. Repeat as needed as Depo-Medrol's effect wears off - usually every 3-6
months.
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A footnote
worth mentioning for LS is Ultram, a human "combination" drug with
both a narcotic-like and an antianxiety component. Used sometimes for bone
cancer in dogs - another very painful condition - I have tried it with good
results on two LS dogs when Depo-Medrol injections were not enough. A greyhound
dose is 50 mg Ultram as needed for
pain, given up to twice daily.