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Fibrinoid Leukodystrophy (Fibrinoid Encephalomyelopathy/Alexander Disease/Rosenthal Fiber Myelopathy)
  • Description
  • Signalment
  • Clinical Features
  • Neurolocalization
  • Genetics
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Fibrinoid leukodystrophy is an extremely rare primary degeneration of nervous elements with a range of clinical signs and disease patterns.
Age of Onset: 3-6 months of age
Sex Predisposition: Any sex of animal can be affected ​
Clinical Course:
Clinical signs progress over the course of several weeks​
Clinical Signs:
Behavioral/Mental Awareness  
Alterations in personality or behavior
Aversion to touch
Reluctance to move
Excessive fear
Depressed
Comatose
Vocalization abnormalities

Posture and Appearance  
Head tilt
Seizure-like activity
Thoracic limb extension
Opisthotonos

Movement 
Paraparesis to tetraplegia
Ataxia
Incoordination
Drifting to the side
Myotonic spasms
Tremor

Proprioception  
Knuckling
Falling
Knuckling on all limbs
Slow postural reflexes

Cranial Nerves
Reduced menace response
Decreased physiologic nystagmus
 
Spinal Reflexes  
 Increased spinal reflexes
Absent spinal reflexes in hindlimbs
Reduced spinal reflexes in forelimbs

Special Functions (e.g. respiration; urination)  
Urinary incontinence
Respiratory failure
Difficulty swallowing

Other 
Increased body temperature
Reddened mucus membranes
The classic histologic lesion consists of so-called Rosenthal fibers distributed around the vessels in the white matter, subpial, and subependymal areas.
Suspected autosomal dominant mutation in canine orthologue of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) gene

For breed specific genetic testing, follow the link below:
https://www.wisdompanel.com/en-us/dog-health-conditions/alexander-disease#:~:text=This%20disease%20is%20autosomal%20recessive,different%20genetic%20or%20clinical%20cause.
To read more about this disease click below:
References
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