Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Compartment syndrome from forelimb tumors in two dogs
By Maki, Lynn C et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2014·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Compartment syndrome associated with expansile antebrachial tumors in two dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 10-year-old female Jack Russell Terrier and a 7-year-old male mixed-breed dog were brought in for severe lameness in their front legs, along with swelling and pain. After tests, the vets found that both dogs had compartment syndrome, a serious condition where pressure builds up in the muscles. Surgery revealed that each dog had a tumor causing the pressure: a mast cell tumor in the Jack Russell Terrier and a suspected sarcoma in the mixed-breed dog. The Jack Russell Terrier recovered well after the tumor was removed, but the mixed-breed dog had to undergo amputation and chemotherapy and was later euthanized due to cancer spread.
People also search for: dog forelimb lameness · Jack Russell Terrier tumor treatment · mixed-breed dog amputation recovery
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION: A 10-year-old spayed female Jack Russell Terrier and a 7-year-old neutered male mixed-breed dog were evaluated because of acute, progressive, unilateral forelimb lameness associated with signs of pain and turgid antebrachial swelling. CLINICAL FINDINGS: For either dog, there were no salient pathological or diagnostic imaging abnormalities. A diagnosis of compartment syndrome was confirmed on the basis of high caudal antebrachial compartmental pressure in the affected forelimb. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: Both dogs underwent surgical exploration of the affected forelimb. In each case, an intramuscular tumor (mast cell tumor in the Jack Russell Terrier and suspected sarcoma in the mixed-breed dog) was detected and presumed to be the cause of the high compartmental pressure. At 6 months following tumor excision, the dog with the mast cell tumor did not have any clinical signs of disease. The dog with a suspected sarcoma underwent tumor excision and forelimb amputation at the proximal portion of the humerus followed by chemotherapy; the dog was euthanized approximately 1 year following treatment because of pulmonary metastasis. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Compartment syndrome is a serious but rarely reported condition in dogs and is typically ascribed to intracompartmental hemorrhage. These 2 cases illustrate the potential for expansile intramuscular antebrachial tumors to cause compartment syndrome in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24432967/