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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Caudal cruciate ligament damage in dogs with cranial cruciate

By Agnello, Kimberly A et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative orthopaedics and traumatology : V.C.O.T·2022·Department of Clinical Sciences and Advanced Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Arthroscopic Caudal Cruciate Ligament Damage in Canine Stifles with Cranial Cruciate Ligament Disease.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with cranial cruciate ligament disease often had damage to their caudal cruciate ligament, with 94% showing some level of tearing. Most of these tears were longitudinal, meaning they ran along the length of the ligament, and synovitis (inflammation of the joint lining) was found in all affected joints. The severity of the synovitis was linked to how much damage there was to the caudal cruciate ligament. This suggests that inflammation in the joint may play a role in causing further ligament injuries.

People also search for: dog knee ligament injury · dog stifle joint problems · treatment for dog cruciate ligament disease

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: &#x2003;The aim of this study was to describe the arthroscopic changes to the caudal cruciate ligament (CdCL) in dogs with cranial cruciate ligament disease. STUDY DESIGN: &#x2003;Arthroscopic video recordings (&#x2009;=&#x2009;117) of the stifle with cranial cruciate ligament disease were reviewed. The extent of CdCL tearing was described. Signalment, palpable stifle stability and the presence of a meniscal tear were recorded. Pathology of the synovial joint and the synovium overlying the CdCL were scored at two time points.Two-way interactions were investigated (&#x2009;<&#x2009;0.05). Univariate analysis and a Wald test (&#x2009;<&#x2009;0.20) were performed. Factors were retained with a Wald test&#x2009;<&#x2009;0.05 or if a confounder, then a changing model coefficient >15%. A weighted kappa statistic was used to evaluate intraobserver agreement. RESULTS: &#x2003;Caudal cruciate ligament tearing was identified in 94% of stifles. Longitudinal tearing (76%) was the most common type of damage (45% partial, 31% full thickness). Synovitis was present in all joints and changes to the synovium overlying the CdCL were less frequently identified (67%).Synovitis was associated with the degree to CdCL tearing. Synovitis overlying the CdCL was associated with lower body weight and lower CdCL damage. CONCLUSION: &#x2003;Caudal cruciate ligament damage is common in dogs with cranial cruciate ligament disease and longitudinal tearing was the most common injury identified. Severity of joint pouch synovitis was positively correlated with the degree of CdCL damage and the portion of the CdCL not exposed to the synovium was unaffected. These findings suggest synovitis is likely a contributor to CdCL injury.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35732182/