“…It has been reported that approximately 1 to 2 per cent of all the dogs admitted to veterinary hospitals have injuries to the spinal cord resulting from intervertebral disc disease (Hoerlein 1953, Priester 1976) and there are many other conditions which can result in injuries to the spinal cord. They involve conditions that cause compression, concussion or laceration of the spinal cord, and include congenital vertebral instabilities (Jeffery and McKee 2001, De Risio and others 2002), penetrating or non‐penetrating traumatic injuries (McKee 1990, Shores 1992, Bagley and others 1999, Olby and others 2002), acquired conditions causing stenosis of the vertebral canal (De Risio and Olby 2000), neoplasia (Lane and others 1994, Jeffery and Phillips 1995), intraspinal synovial and ganglion cysts (Levitski and others 1999a, b, Webb and others 2001), and arachnoid cysts (Webb 1999, Rylander and others 2002). Although they have not been reported in dogs and cats, potentially life‐threatening conditions, for example, autonomic dysreflexia (Weaver and others 2002), or painful conditions can develop as a result of spinal cord injury in animals (Christensen and Hulsebosch 1997, Hulsebosch and others 2000).…”