Wobbler Syndrome: What We Know and Where We’re Headed

Find out what you need to know about this devastating neurologic disease and what research developments are underway.
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Wobbler Syndrome: What We Know and Where We’re Headed
Note the difference between the MRI image showing a normal spinal cord on the left and the one showing cord compression on the right.| Photo: Courtesy Dr. Jennifer Janes
Cervical stenotic myelopathy (CSM), a neurologic disease commonly known as wobbler syndrome, was first reported anecdotally back in the mid-1800s. Skeletal malformations of the neck vertebrae in affected animals lead to narrowing of the cervical spinal canal and subsequent spinal cord compression. Clinical signs primarily include neurologic deficits, with the hind limbs typically more severely affected than the forelimbs. In severe cases, veterinarians might recommend euthanasia for humane reasons and to guard horse and human safety.

Equine CSM is a multifactorial disease, meaning it has many causes. High planes of nutrition (overfeeding), increased growth rates, alterations in zinc and copper concentrations, and genetic determinants could be responsible. Researchers have clearly established the relationship between nutrition, mineral intake, and skeletal development; any disruption in this balance can result in asynchronous (uneven) skeletal growth and possible clinical signs of disease. While we know or suspect that all these factors play a role in CSM development, the exact mechanisms leading to clinical disease remain unclear.

What we do know is how gender, breed, and age factor into the epidemiology of this devastating disease. Males are more often affected than females. Breeds such as Thoroughbreds, American Saddlebreds, Warmbloods, and Tennessee Walking Horses are overrepresented, which means they seem to develop the disease more often than horses of other breeds. And in various studies researchers have identified the mean age of CSM horses as younger than 2 years, which has prompted veterinarians to categorize CSM as a developmental bone disease.

Over the years practitioners have developed approaches for diagnosing CSM. All clinical workups begin with the veterinarian conducting a thorough neurologic exam, looking primarily for signs of ataxia (incoordination). The next step is using radiography to visualize the neck vertebrae. Researchers have defined what’s normal or healthy for a neck based on skeletal anatomical measurements at each vertebral site, which helps veterinarians identify presumed areas of spinal canal narrowing. Veterinarians can perform myelograms (special radiographs taken after injecting dye into the spinal canal) to see the actual compression

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Written by:

Jennifer Janes, DVM, PhD, graduated from Vanderbilt University in 2002 with a Bachelor of Music degree focused on piano before heading to the University of Tennessee College of Veterinary Medicine. After graduation, she completed a one-year rotating internship at Wisconsin Equine Clinic and Hospital. Developing interests in equine musculoskeletal disease lead her to the University of Kentucky, where she completed a dual anatomic pathology residency and PhD program in the Department of Veterinary Science, finishing in 2014. Since 2015 Jennifer has been on faculty there at the Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory (UKVDL) and is currently associate professor of veterinary anatomic pathology in the Department of Veterinary Science.

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