Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Severe polysaccharide storage myopathy in Belgian and Percheron draught horses.
- Journal:
- Equine veterinary journal
- Year:
- 1997
- Authors:
- Valentine, B A et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Pathology · United States
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
In a study of Belgian and Percheron draught horses, researchers found a serious muscle disease that led to death or the need for euthanasia in eight horses aged 2 to 21 years. The horses showed various symptoms, including weakness and muscle wasting in the younger horses, while older ones were unable to stand. Blood tests revealed increased muscle enzymes in five of the horses, and several different muscle disorders were diagnosed. Muscle samples showed an abnormal buildup of complex sugars and glycogen, which is a type of stored energy, and certain changes in muscle structure were noted, particularly in older horses. Unfortunately, the outcome for these horses was poor, as the disease was severe and often fatal.
Abstract
A severe myopathy leading to death or euthanasia was identified in 4 Belgian and 4 Percheron draught horses age 2-21 years. Clinical signs ranged from overt weakness and muscle atrophy in 2 horses age 2 and 3 years, to recumbency with inability to rise in 6 horses age 4-21 years. In 5 horses there was mild to severe increases in muscle enzyme levels. Clinical diagnoses included equine motor neuron disease (2 horses), post anaesthetic myopathy (2 horses), exertional myopathy (2 horses), myopathy due to unknown (one horse), and equine protozoal myelitis (one horse). Characteristic histopathology of muscle from affected horses was the presence of excessive complex polysaccharide and/or glycogen, revealed by periodic acid-Schiff staining in all cases and by electron microscopy in one case. Evaluation of frozen section histochemistry performed on 2 cases indicated that affected fibres were Type 2 glycolytic fibres. Subsarcolemmal and intracytoplasmic vacuoles were most prominent in 3 horses age 2-4 years, and excessive glycogen, with little or no complex polysaccharide, was the primary compound stored in affected muscle in these young horses. Myopathic changes, including fibre size variation, fibre hypertrophy, internal nuclei, and interstitial fat infiltration, were most prominent in 5 horses age 6-21 years, and the accumulation of complex polysaccharide appeared to increase with age. Mild to moderate segmental myofibre necrosis was present in all cases.
Find similar cases for your pet
PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.
Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9234015/