학술논문

Clinicopathological and pedigree investigation of a novel spinocerebellar neurological disease in juvenile Quarter Horses in North America
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, Vol 38, Iss 3, Pp 1808-1814 (2024)
Subject
ataxia
inherited
neurodegeneration
spinal cord
Veterinary medicine
SF600-1100
Language
English
ISSN
1939-1676
0891-6640
Abstract
Abstract Background In 2020, a novel neurologic disease was observed in juvenile Quarter Horses (QHs) in North America. It was unknown if this was an aberrant manifestation of another previously described neurological disorder in foals, such as equine neuroaxonal dystrophy/equine degenerative myeloencephalopathy (eNAD/EDM). Hypothesis/Objectives To describe the clinical findings, outcomes, and postmortem changes with Equine Juvenile Spinocerebellar Ataxia (EJSCA), differentiate the disease from other similar neurological disorders, and determine a mode of inheritance. Animals Twelve neurologically affected QH foals and the dams. Methods Genomic DNA was isolated and pedigrees were manually constructed. Results All foals (n = 12/12) had a history of acute onset of neurological deficits with no history of trauma. Neurological deficits were characterized by asymmetrical spinal ataxia, with pelvic limbs more severely affected than thoracic limbs. Clinicopathological abnormalities included high serum activity of gamma‐glutamyl transferase and hyperglycemia. All foals became recumbent (median, 3 days: [0–18 days]), which necessitated humane euthanasia (n = 11/12, 92%; the remaining case was found dead). Histological evaluation at postmortem revealed dilated myelin sheaths and digestion chambers within the spinal cord, most prominently in the dorsal spinocerebellar tracts. Pedigree analysis revealed a likely autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. Conclusions and Clinical Importance EJSCA is a uniformly fatal, rapidly progressive, likely autosomal recessive neurological disease of QHs