Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog skull tumors removed and repaired with titanium mesh surgery
By Rosselli, Desiree D et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2017·University of Georgia, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Cranioplasty Using Titanium Mesh After Skull Tumor Resection in Five Dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A dog with a skull tumor underwent surgery to remove the tumor and had a titanium mesh placed to repair the skull. After the surgery, the dog's neurological function either stayed the same or improved, and there were no complications noted two weeks later. Follow-up imaging showed that the titanium mesh was in place and functioning well. Unfortunately, two dogs were later euthanized due to tumor regrowth and other health issues, but one dog is still alive and healthy over a year later.
People also search for: dog skull tumor surgery · titanium mesh for dog cranioplasty · dog brain surgery recovery
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical details, surgery, postoperative imaging, and short to mid-term outcome after cranioplasty with titanium mesh in dogs with large skull tumors. STUDY DESIGN: Case series. ANIMALS: Client-owned dogs with skull tumors (n=5). METHODS: All tumors were removed via craniectomy and a sheet of titanium mesh was contoured to reconstruct the calvarial defect and sutured to surrounding musculature. RESULTS: Four dogs had multilobular tumors of bone and 1 dog had a soft tissue sarcoma invading the cranial vault. Neurologic examination was unchanged or improved postoperative, a good cosmetic appearance was achieved, and no complications were noted at 2 weeks postoperative. Late postoperative computed tomography (CT) in 2 dogs and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in 1 dog confirmed the presence of the titanium mesh without migration. There was no interference of the mesh with image interpretation and definitive radiation therapy was pursued in 1 dog without complication. Late follow-up reported 2 dogs euthanatized; at 44 weeks postoperative due to tumor re-growth; at 12 weeks postoperative for hemoabdomen, respectively. One dog drowned at 40 weeks postoperative, 1 dog was lost to follow-up, and 1 dog is alive at 83 weeks postoperative free of clinical signs. CONCLUSIONS: Titanium mesh is suitable for cranioplasty based on its strength, biocompatibility, and excellent handling characteristics. It does not interfere with acquisition or interpretation of CT or MR images, thereby allowing postoperative imaging for ongoing assessment.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27805731/