Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Arthroscopic laser extirpation of metacarpophalangeal synovial pad proliferation in eleven horses.
- Journal:
- Equine veterinary journal
- Year:
- 2001
- Authors:
- Murphy, D J & Nixon, A J
- Affiliation:
- Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences · United States
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
This study looked at a new surgical method for treating a condition in horses called metacarpophalangeal synovial pad proliferation, which involves the thickening of a soft tissue pad in the fetlock joint. Eleven horses with this issue were treated using a laser technique that allowed the veterinarian to remove the problematic tissue with minimal risk. Before surgery, all horses were lame and had swelling in the fetlock joint, and some showed signs of bone changes or fractures on X-rays. After the procedure, there were no complications, and all horses were able to return to training within 90 days without any signs of the problem coming back. Overall, this laser surgery proved to be a safe and effective option for treating this condition in horses.
Abstract
A new surgical technique for treatment of chronic metacarpophalangeal synovial pad proliferation in the horse and the findings and long-term follow-up from 11 clinical cases are described. The medical records of all equine lameness cases attributed to metacarpophalangeal synovial pad proliferation admitted to the College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell University (1991-1996) were reviewed and all those treated surgically by laser extirpation were included in this study. Retrieved data included subject details, preoperative lameness, ultrasonography, radiography and synovial fluid evaluations and lesion histopathology. Lesions were ablated using a CO2 or a Nd:YAG laser intra-articularly with arthroscopic guidance. Long-term follow-up was provided by telephone conversation with owners or trainers. All horses had fetlock joint effusion and were lame at presentation. Mean synovial pad thickness measured ultrasonographically was 9.0 mm (range 6-15 mm). Seven horses (64%) had radiographic evidence of remodelling of the dorsal cortex of distal McIII and 3 horses (27%) had concurrent dorsal proximal P1 fractures. No postoperative complications were noted. All 11 horses returned to training within 90 days of surgery without recurrence of the lesion(s). Laser extirpation of metacarpophalangeal synovial pad proliferation using arthroscopic guidance provided a rapid, safe and efficient method for surgical removal of such lesions without complications or recurrence. This surgical technique provides a suitable alternative to more conventional treatments for chronic metacarpophalangeal synovial pad proliferation in horses, particularly for removal of very large, fibrotic masses.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11352353/