A six‐year‐old fox terrier bitch, used for badger hunting, developed acutely progressive painless disturbance of locomotion with pronounced weakness. Evidence of central nervous disease or myasthenia gravis was not present. Muscle histology revealed trichinella larvae and changes consistent with a combined inflammatory myopathy and neuropathy. An enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) showed significantly increased serum levels of antibodies to Trichinella spiralis antigen. It is likely that the signs of neuromuscular disease shown by the dog were due to the trichinella infection. The case illustrates that symptomatic trichinosis should be considered in the clinical workup of myopathies in dogs with access to potentially trichinella‐infected wildlife.
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