Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Horse limping on back leg - what helped with fracture?
By Mueller, P O et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·1994·Department of Large Animal Medicine and Surgery, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Arthroscopic removal of a fragment from an intercondylar eminence fracture of the tibia in a two-year-old horse.
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A 2-year-old Standardbred colt was brought in because he was limping on his left back leg. The vet found swelling in his knee joints and noticed he was limping severely. X-rays showed that he had a complete fracture in a specific part of his tibia, which is a bone in the leg. The vet used a special camera technique called arthroscopy to look inside the joint and found that a piece of the fractured bone was unstable and needed to be removed. After the surgery, the colt was able to train and race again without any lameness, showing that the treatment was successful.
Abstract
A 2-year-old Standardbred colt was admitted because of lameness of the left hind limb. Physical examination revealed marked effusion of the left femoropatellar and femorotibial joints and grade IV/V lameness of the left hind limb. Radiography of the left stifle revealed a complete fracture of the medial tubercle of the intercondylar eminence of the tibia. Arthroscopy was used to provide diagnostic, therapeutic, and prognostic information. A cranial approach to the medial compartment of the femorotibial joint was performed. Manipulation of the medial tubercle revealed it to be unstable, but a direct view of the fracture was obscured by the cranial cruciate ligament. The fracture fragment was removed, and visual inspection revealed approximately half of the cranial cruciate ligament at its insertion on the intercondylar eminence to be compromised. Fourteen months after surgery, the horse had trained and had raced without lameness. Accurate evaluation of the intra-articular soft-tissue structures of the stifle is important because ligamentous and/or meniscal injuries often are the limiting factors in determining the potential for a successful outcome and future athletic performance.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8063603/