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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with tibial bone tumor treated by limb-sparing surgery using

By Shimada, Masakazu et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2023·Department of Veterinary Science, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Case report: Limb-sparing surgery of tibial chondrosarcoma with frozen autologous bone graft using liquid nitrogen in a dog.

Species:
dog
OsteosarcomaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

An 8-year-old bulldog was diagnosed with a bone tumor called chondrosarcoma in his left leg, along with other issues affecting his right knee and spine. Instead of amputating the leg, the veterinarian performed a special surgery that involved using a frozen bone graft to remove the tumor while preserving the leg. After the surgery, the dog had some difficulty walking but was able to maintain a good quality of life for 20 months, much to the owner's satisfaction.

People also search for: bulldog bone tumor treatment · chondrosarcoma in dogs · limb-sparing surgery for dogs · dog leg surgery recovery · frozen bone graft for dogs

Abstract

Chondrosarcoma is the second most common primary bone tumor after osteosarcoma in dogs. Chondrosarcoma has a good prognosis owing to its low metastatic rate and long survival time, even with amputation alone. However, amputation risks reducing the quality of life in patients with other orthopedic diseases of the non-affected limb, neurological diseases, or large body size. Limb-sparing surgery with frozen autologous bone grafting using liquid nitrogen allows bone quality to be maintained in the normal bone area while killing tumor cells, thereby preserving the affected limb. Thus, it is expected to maintain the quality of life. We describe herein limb-sparing surgery for tibial chondrosarcoma with frozen autologous bone graft using liquid nitrogen in an 8-year and 8-month-old castrated male bulldog weighing 29.2 kg. The patient had chondrosarcoma of the left tibia, suspected cranial cruciate ligament rupture of the right stifle, and degenerative lumbosacral stenosis. In such a case, amputation would increase the burden on the non-affected limb or spine, which could cause difficulty in walking; therefore, we performed limb-sparing surgery. Postoperatively, although a circumduction gait associated with stifle arthrodesis remained, the patient maintained the quality of life for 20 months, and the owner was satisfied with the results.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37077946/