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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Surgery options compared for dogs with neck disc disease

By Falzone, Cristian et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·Department of Neurology-Neurosurgery, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Comparison of Two Surgical Techniques for the Treatment of Canine Disc Associated-Cervical Spondylomyelopathy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 25 dogs with neck problems caused by disc issues underwent surgery to treat their condition. They were divided into two groups: one received a prosthetic disc implant, while the other had a vertebral distraction stabilization procedure. After a year, more dogs in the distraction stabilization group showed improvement compared to those with the prosthetic disc, who also faced more complications like infections and the need for additional surgeries. Overall, the distraction stabilization method appeared to be a safer and more effective option for these dogs.

People also search for: dog neck pain surgery · canine cervical spondylomyelopathy treatment · dog disc surgery recovery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare prosthetic disc and vertebral distraction stabilization in dogs with disc-associated cervical spondylomyelopathy (DA-CSM). STUDY DESIGN: A retrospective clinical study. ANIMALS: 25 dogs. METHODS: Dogs presenting with clinical signs and MRI findings compatible with DA-CSM underwent surgery. Implantation of the Adamo's prosthetic disc (PD) or vertebral distraction-stabilization (DS) with intervertebral cage, ventral locking plates, and dorsal transarticular screws was performed. All dogs were followed-up and evaluated clinically for a minimum of 1 year and radiographically for at least 3 months. In particular, we focused on the evaluation of subsidence (the degree of vertebral collapse). RESULTS: Twenty-five dogs were enrolled: 12 with PD implantation and 13 with DS implantation. Of these, 24 dogs were followed-up at 1 year. Overall, 12 dogs improved (4 PD and 8 DS), eight were stable (4 PD and 4 DS), and four deteriorated (3 PD and 1 DS). Deterioration was more common in PD cases, especially soon after surgery. In a few PD cases, a second surgery was necessary. The most common complication in dogs with DS was discospondylitis. Subsidence was detected in 11 PD and 7 DS dogs. Subsidence was more severe and occurred sooner after surgery in PD cases compared to DS cases. DS cases were more prone to clinical improvement and less prone to subsidence than PD cases in this study. However, the statistical evidence was weak owing to the small sample size. CONCLUSION: The preliminary results suggest that prosthetic disc implantation is more prone to clinical and radiographic failures than distraction stabilization. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The DS technique is a valuable surgical option for treating dogs with DA-CSM, with favorable short- and long-term clinical and radiographic outcomes.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35795784/