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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Gait changes in dogs after cemented vs cementless hip replacement

By Drüen, S et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative orthopaedics and traumatology : V.C.O.T·2012·Small Animal Clinic, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Computer-based gait analysis of dogs: evaluation of kinetic and kinematic parameters after cemented and cementless total hip replacement.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 18 adult dogs with hip dysplasia underwent surgery for total hip replacement (THR) to help improve their limping. Researchers compared two types of surgery: cemented and cementless. After four months, both groups showed similar improvements in their walking patterns, with most dogs no longer showing signs of lameness. This suggests that neither type of surgery is significantly better for reducing limping in the short term, but more research is needed to confirm these results over a longer period.

People also search for: dog limping after hip surgery · total hip replacement for dogs · cemented vs cementless hip replacement in dogs

Abstract

To date it is unclear whether cementless total hip replacement (THR) in dogs is of clinical advantage in comparison to cemented THR with regard to lameness improvement. Thus the aim of this study was to compare objectively the development of the gait pattern after cemented and cementless THR in dogs. For this purpose, 18 adult dogs with hip dysplasia underwent computer-based gait analysis on an instrumented treadmill prior to unilateral THR and then again ten days, four weeks and four months after surgery. Analysed kinetic parameters were symmetry indices (SI) of vertical ground reaction forces (GRF), which included peak vertical forces (PFz), mean vertical forces (MFz), vertical impulse (IFz), and vertical ground reaction forces of the arthroplasty limbs only. Analysed kinematic parameters were range-of-motion and the flexion and extension angles of hip, stifle and hock joints. The symmetry indice for PVF, MFz and IFz decreased to a value less than six in both THR groups four months after surgery, which is defined as not lame. Improvement in lameness of the arthroplasty limbs during the examination period of four months was not significantly different between the cemented and cementless groups. The results suggest that within a short-term observation period of four months after surgery, neither cementless nor cemented THR have a greater advantage with regard to lameness improvement. Additional studies with larger pools of subjects and longer time periods for follow-up examinations are necessary to verify these findings.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22828804/