14 results on '"Westrup, U."'
Search Results
2. Survival and clinical outcome of dogs with ischaemic stroke
- Author
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Gredal, H., Toft, N., Westrup, U., Motta, L., Gideon, P., Arlien-Søborg, P., Skerritt, G.C., and Berendt, M.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Diagnosis and long-term outcome in dogs with acute onset intracranial signs
- Author
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Gredal, H., Thomsen, B. B., Westrup, U., Boza-Serrano, A., Deierborg, T., McEvoy, F. J., Platt, S., Lambertsen, K. L., Berendt, M., Gredal, H., Thomsen, B. B., Westrup, U., Boza-Serrano, A., Deierborg, T., McEvoy, F. J., Platt, S., Lambertsen, K. L., and Berendt, M.
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate dogs with acute onset of intracranial signs suspected of stroke by primary veterinary clinicians, and establish possible differential diagnoses and long-term outcome. In addition, serum C-reactive protein and plasma cytokines were investigated as potential biomarkers of disease. Materials and Methods: All cases were evaluated by neurologic examination, routine haematology and biochemistry and measurement of serum C-reactive protein, plasma cytokine concentrations (interleukin-2, -6, -8, -10, tumour necrosis factor) and low-field MRI. Results: Primary veterinarians contacted the investigators with 85 suspected stroke cases. Only 20 met the inclusion criteria. Of these, two were diagnosed with ischaemic stroke. Other causes were idiopathic vestibular syndrome (n=6), brain tumour (n=5) and inflammatory brain disease (n=2); in five cases a precise diagnosis could not be determined. Median survival times were: brain tumour, 3 days, idiopathic vestibular syndrome, 315 days, ischaemic stroke, 365 days and inflammatory central nervous system (CNS) disease, 468 days. The median plasma concentrations of interleukin-2, -6, -8, -10 or tumour necrosis factor were not significantly increased in any of the diagnosis groups compared to healthy controls. Serum C-reactive protein was higher in dogs with brain tumours and inflammatory brain disease but not above the upper bound of the reference interval. Clinical Significance: Dogs that present with acute onset intracranial disease may have ischaemic stroke but are more likely to have other causes. Many dogs with such acute onset of neurological dysfunction (brain tumours excluded) may recover within a couple of weeks despite their initial severe clinical appearance.
- Published
- 2020
4. Diagnosis and long‐term outcome in dogs with acute onset intracranial signs
- Author
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Gredal, H., primary, Thomsen, B. B., additional, Westrup, U., additional, Boza‐Serrano, A., additional, Deierborg, T., additional, McEvoy, F. J., additional, Platt, S., additional, Lambertsen, K. L., additional, and Berendt, M., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Mechanical sensory threshold in Cavalier King Charles spaniels with syringomyelia-associated scratching and control dogs
- Author
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Thoefner, M. S., Westrup, U., Toft, N., Bjerrum, O. J., Berendt, M., Thoefner, M. S., Westrup, U., Toft, N., Bjerrum, O. J., and Berendt, M.
- Abstract
It is assumed that Cavalier King Charles spaniels with Chiari-like malformation and syringomyelia experience central neuropathic pain. An association between spinal cord parenchymal lesions and specific clinical signs (e.g. spontaneous and evoked scratching, withdrawal, and paroxysmal pain manifestations with vocalisation) has been suggested. This led to the hypothesis that mechanical sensory threshold is altered in clinical cases. The aim of this study was to quantify the cervical mechanical sensory threshold using Semmes-Weinstein monofilaments in nine Cavalier King Charles spaniels with Chiari-like malformation and assumed syringomyelia-associated central neuropathic pain compared to eight control dogs. Clinical and neurological examination including magnetic resonance imaging was undertaken. Mean mechanical sensory threshold was not significantly different between case and control dogs (t-test on log10 transformed data; P = 0.25). Substantial variation within and between dogs was seen, with individual thresholds ranging from 0.04 to 26 g in case dogs and from 0.02 to 10 g in control dogs. Based on these results, it is unlikely that Cavalier King Charles spaniels with Chiari-like malformation and syringomyelia have increased mechanical sensation characterised by lower mechanical sensory threshold when quantified with Semmes-Weinstein monofilaments. Whether clinical cases experience central neuropathic pain remains unknown. The assessment of sensory function in dogs with assumed central neuropathic pain should be multimodal and include not only mechanical but also tactile and thermal threshold quantification. The use of threshold quantification in a clinical setting is challenging due to an insufficient signal relative to the biological background noise within and between dogs.
- Published
- 2019
6. Incorporation of measures for monitoring an assessment of the female reproductive system in a 52-week toxicity study in the minipig
- Author
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Makin, A., primary, Kaber, K., additional, Lykke Jensen, M., additional, Jeppesen, G., additional, Westrup, U., additional, Dyring Jakobsen, S., additional, and Møller Laursen, S., additional
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- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Prevalence and Heritability of Symptomatic Syringomyelia in Cavalier King Charles Spaniels and Long-term Outcome in Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Littermates
- Author
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Thøfner, M.S., primary, Stougaard, C.L., additional, Westrup, U., additional, Madry, A.A., additional, Knudsen, C.S., additional, Berg, H., additional, Jensen, C.S.E., additional, Handby, R.M.L., additional, Gredal, H., additional, Fredholm, M., additional, and Berendt, M., additional
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
8. Evaluation of a polyacrylamide hydrogel in the treatment of induced osteoarthritis in a goat model: a randomized controlled pilot study
- Author
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Tnibar, A., primary, Persson, A-B., additional, Nielsen, H., additional, Svalastoga, E., additional, Westrup, U., additional, McEvoy, F., additional, Knudsen, J., additional, Thomsen, P.D., additional, Berg, L.C., additional, Jacobsen, S., additional, and Christensen, L.H., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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9. Prevalence and Heritability of Symptomatic Syringomyelia in Cavalier King Charles Spaniels and Long-term Outcome in Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Littermates.
- Author
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Thøfner, M.S., Stougaard, C.L., Westrup, U., Madry, A.A., Knudsen, C.S., Berg, H., Jensen, C.S.E., Handby, R.M.L., Gredal, H., Fredholm, M., and Berendt, M.
- Subjects
SYRINGOMYELIA ,HERITABILITY ,CAVALIER King Charles spaniel ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,EUTHANASIA of animals ,DISEASES - Abstract
Background Syringomyelia ( SM) is common in the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel ( CKCS). Dogs with syringes express clinical signs or might be clinically silent. Objectives To investigate the prevalence and heritability of symptomatic SM, the association between clinical signs and magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI) findings, and long-term outcome. Animals All CKCS registered in the Danish Kennel Club in 2001 (n = 240). Methods A cross-sectional questionnaire-based prevalence study validated by telephone interviews and clinically investigated clinical signs of SM. Dogs were 6 years at the time of investigation. A prospective observational litter study including clinical investigations, MRI and 5-year follow-up of symptomatic and asymptomatic siblings. Heritability was estimated based on the scale of liability in the study population and litter cohort. Results The cross-sectional study estimated a prevalence of symptomatic SM at 15.4% in the population. Thirteen symptomatic and 9 asymptomatic siblings participated in the litter study. Spinal cord syringes were confirmed in 21 of 22 littermates (95%). Syrinx diameter and mean syrinx : spinal cord ratio were significantly correlated with clinical signs ( P < .01). Estimated heritability of symptomatic SM was 0.81. Symptomatic SM motivated euthanasia in 20%. Dogs with syringes, which expressed no clinical signs at the age of 6, remained asymptomatic in 14/15 cases (93%). Conclusions and Clinical Importance The prevalence of symptomatic SM is high and genetics have a high impact on clinical disease expression. Further investigations of factors influencing the outbreak threshold of clinical signs of SM are desirable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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10. Relationship between syringomyelia and myxomatous mitral valve disease in Cavalier King Charles spaniels.
- Author
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Bach MBT, Stougaard CL, Thøfner MS, Reimann MJ, Westrup U, Koch J, Fredholm M, Martinussen T, Berendt M, and Olsen LH
- Subjects
- Humans, Dogs, Animals, Mitral Valve diagnostic imaging, Retrospective Studies, Prospective Studies, Syringomyelia diagnostic imaging, Syringomyelia veterinary, Dog Diseases diagnostic imaging, Heart Valve Diseases veterinary
- Abstract
Background: Syringomyelia (SM) and myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD) are highly prevalent in Cavalier King Charles spaniels (CKCS). Cardiac status in CKCS with and without SM is currently unknown., Objectives: To investigate the association between SM and MMVD severity in CKCS and CKCS with SM with and without clinical signs of SM., Animals: Fifty-five CKCS: 40 with SM (22 symptomatic and 18 asymptomatic) and 15 without SM., Methods: A combined retrospective and prospective study. MRI and echocardiography were used to diagnose SM and MMVD, respectively. The association between SM and MMVD severity (left ventricle internal diameter in diastole normalized to bodyweight [LVIDDN] and left atrium to aortic ratio [LA/Ao]) were tested using multivariable linear regression analysis adjusting for sex and age., Results: Overall, no significant difference in LVIDDN and LA/Ao was found between CKCS with or without SM. However, CKCS with symptomatic SM had significantly smaller LVIDDN (1.45 [1.30-1.50]) (median [IQR]) and LA/Ao (1.20 [1.10-1.28]) compared to CKCS with asymptomatic SM (1.60 [1.50-1.90] and 1.40 [1.20-1.75]) as well as CKCS without SM (0.24 [0.03-0.45] and 0.30 [0.05-0.56]) (all P values <.03)., Conclusions and Clinical Importance: An association between MMVD and SM was not confirmed in this cohort of CKCS, indicating that MMVD and SM do not co-segregate. However, CKCS with symptomatic SM had smaller left ventricle and atrial size compared to CKCS with asymptomatic SM and CKCS without SM., (© 2024 The Authors. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine.)
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Diagnosis and long-term outcome in dogs with acute onset intracranial signs.
- Author
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Gredal H, Thomsen BB, Westrup U, Boza-Serrano A, Deierborg T, McEvoy FJ, Platt S, Lambertsen KL, and Berendt M
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomarkers, C-Reactive Protein, Dog Diseases, Dogs, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Brain Ischemia veterinary, Stroke veterinary
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate dogs with acute onset of intracranial signs suspected of stroke by primary veterinary clinicians, and establish possible differential diagnoses and long-term outcome. In addition, serum C-reactive protein and plasma cytokines were investigated as potential biomarkers of disease., Materials and Methods: All cases were evaluated by neurologic examination, routine haematology and biochemistry and measurement of serum C-reactive protein, plasma cytokine concentrations (interleukin-2, -6, -8, -10, tumour necrosis factor) and low-field MRI., Results: Primary veterinarians contacted the investigators with 85 suspected stroke cases. Only 20 met the inclusion criteria. Of these, two were diagnosed with ischaemic stroke. Other causes were idiopathic vestibular syndrome (n=6), brain tumour (n=5) and inflammatory brain disease (n=2); in five cases a precise diagnosis could not be determined. Median survival times were: brain tumour, 3 days, idiopathic vestibular syndrome, 315 days, ischaemic stroke, 365 days and inflammatory central nervous system (CNS) disease, 468 days. The median plasma concentrations of interleukin-2, -6, -8, -10 or tumour necrosis factor were not significantly increased in any of the diagnosis groups compared to healthy controls. Serum C-reactive protein was higher in dogs with brain tumours and inflammatory brain disease but not above the upper bound of the reference interval., Clinical Significance: Dogs that present with acute onset intracranial disease may have ischaemic stroke but are more likely to have other causes. Many dogs with such acute onset of neurological dysfunction (brain tumours excluded) may recover within a couple of weeks despite their initial severe clinical appearance., (© 2019 British Small Animal Veterinary Association.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. D-Dimer Concentrations and Thromboelastography in Five Dogs With Ischemic Stroke.
- Author
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Koch BC, Motta L, Wiinberg B, Westrup U, Kristensen AT, Skerritt G, Berendt M, and Gredal H
- Abstract
Ischemic stroke is a condition increasingly recognized in dogs; however, the number of publications on dogs with ischemic stroke is still limited and hemostatic parameters are infrequently reported. D-dimer levels have been shown to be elevated in people with acute ischemic stroke compared to a healthy control population and it has been proposed that a normal D-dimer can be used to exclude thromboembolism in dogs. In this case series, we report hemostatic parameters, including D-dimer and thromboelastography (TEG) along with clinical and imaging findings for five dogs diagnosed with ischemic stroke. All dogs had a normal D-dimer concentration on presentation. A hypercoagulable state was identified in two dogs based on the results of the TEG, and was suspected in the remaining three cases based on a shortened TEG clot reaction time. Based on the findings in the present cases, a D-dimer within the normal reference range does not seem an appropriate negative predictor for canine ischemic stroke. The demonstration of a possible hypercoagulable state, as identified by the TEG, is an interesting finding which should be explored further to help reveal predisposing hypercoagulable conditions in dogs with ischemic stroke.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Radiographic, ultrasonographic, and anatomic assessment of femoral trochlea morphology in red foxes (Vulpes vulpes).
- Author
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Miles JE, Westrup U, Svalastoga EL, and Eriksen T
- Subjects
- Animals, Cadaver, Femur diagnostic imaging, Patella anatomy & histology, Patella diagnostic imaging, Radiography, Stifle anatomy & histology, Ultrasonography, Femur anatomy & histology, Foxes anatomy & histology, Stifle diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Objective: To compare repeatability and equivalency of measures of femoral trochlea depth and trochlear angle in red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) determined by use of radiography, ultrasonography, and digital photography of cadaver limbs., Sample: 24 pelvic limbs from 12 red fox cadavers., Procedures: Cranioproximal-craniodistal oblique (skyline) and lateromedial radiographic views of the stifle joint and ultrasonographic images at 5 locations along the femoral trochlea were used in the study. Spacing of the 5 locations was determined on the basis of patellar position with the stifle joint at various caudal angles ranging from 96° to maximal extension (approx 170°). Ultrasonographic measurements were compared with those obtained at matched locations on photographs of anatomic preparations. Trochlear depth was assessed with all 3 image formats, and trochlear angle (measured between the trochlear ridges and sulcus) was assessed on radiographs and ultrasonographic images. Patellar thickness was measured on radiographs. Values obtained were compared by means of ANOVA, modified Bland-Altman plots, and repeatability testing., Results: Depth measurement repeatability was considered good for all modalities. Small but significant differences between mean ultrasonographic trochlear depth and anatomic (photographic) measurements were found at 3 locations; 95% limits of agreement for paired anatomic and ultrasonographic measurements were wide. The ratio of trochlear depth to radiographic patellar thickness was approximately 30% for all modalities. Trochlear angle measurements were more variable than trochlear depth measurements, especially in the distal aspect of the trochlea., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Paired anatomic and ultrasonographic measurements did not appear equivalent in this study, possibly attributable to imprecise probe location, which could limit quantitative use of ultrasonography in assessing proximal trochlear depth in a clinical setting.
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- 2014
- Full Text
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14. Speckle tracking echocardiography in mature Irish Wolfhound dogs: technical feasibility, measurement error and reference intervals.
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Westrup U and McEvoy FJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomechanical Phenomena, Dogs, Echocardiography methods, Female, Heart anatomy & histology, Male, Reference Values, Echocardiography veterinary, Heart physiology
- Abstract
Background: Two-dimensional strain measurements obtained by speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) have been reported in both humans and dogs. Incorporation of this technique into canine clinical practice requires the availability of measurements from clinically normal dogs, ideally of the same breed, taken under normal clinical conditions.The aims of this prospective study were to assess if it is possible to obtain STE data during a routine echocardiographic examination in Irish Wolfhound dogs and that these data will provide reference values and an estimation of measurement error., Methods: Fifty- four healthy mature Irish Wolfhounds were used. These were scanned under normal clinical conditions to obtain in one session both standard echocardiographic parameters and STE data. Measurement error was determined separately in 5 healthy mature Irish Wolfhounds., Results: Eight dogs were rejected by the software algorithm for reasons of image quality, resulting in a total of 46 dogs (85.2%) being included in the statistical analysis. In 46 dogs it was possible to obtain STE data from three scanning planes, as well as to measure the rotation of the left ventricle at two levels and thus calculate the torsion of the heart. The mean peak radial strain at the cardiac apex (RS-apex) was 45.1 ± 10.4% (n = 44), and the mean peak radial strain at the base (RS-base) was 36.9 ± 14.7% (n = 46). The mean peak circumferential strain at the apex (CS-apex) was -24.8 ± 6.2% (n = 44), and the mean peak circumferential strain at the heart base (CS-base) was -15.9 ± 3.2% (n = 44). The mean peak longitudinal strain (LS) was -16.2 ± 3.0% (n = 46). The calculated mean peak torsion of the heart was 11.6 ± 5.1 degrees (n = 45).The measurement error was 24.8%, 26.4%, 11.5%, 6.7%, 9.0% and 10 degrees, for RS-apex, RS-base, CS-apex, CS-base, LS and torsion, respectively., Conclusions: It is concluded that this technique can be included in a normal echocardiographic examination in large breed dogs under clinical conditions. The usefulness of the reference values reported here, given their wide normal range, will ultimately be determined by the values that are obtained from a large numbers of diseased dogs.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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