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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

CT shows lower bone density in dogs with medial coronoid disease

By Humphreys, William J et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2022·Small Animal Teaching Hospital, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: CT attenuation of the medial coronoid process is reduced in dogs with medial coronoid disease but independent of arthroscopic disease severity.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with elbow pain was examined for a condition called medial coronoid disease (MCD), which affects the elbow joint. Researchers found that the medial coronoid process (a part of the elbow) showed reduced density on CT scans in dogs with MCD compared to those without it. This change could help vets detect MCD earlier, but the severity of the disease seen during surgery didn't affect the CT results. Understanding these findings can help pet owners recognize elbow issues sooner and seek appropriate treatment.

People also search for: dog elbow pain · medial coronoid disease in dogs · CT scan elbow joint dog

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare the attenuation of the medial coronoid process (MCP) in dogs with and without arthroscopically confirmed evidence of medial coronoid disease (MCD). ANIMALS: The database at our institution was searched for cases with thoracic limb lameness, diagnosed with MCD by arthroscopic examination that had CT as part of their investigation and compared with a control group of elbow joints from cadavers euthanized for reasons unrelated to MCD. A total of 84 elbow joints were included that met these criteria. PROCEDURES: Following CT, a standardized measurement of the MCP was obtained from apex to base and the mean attenuation, SD, and total area were recorded. A comparative measurement was obtained from the proximal radial cortex at the level of the nutrient foramen. Elbow joint arthroscopy was carried out using standard portals, and the modified Outerbridge score was (MOS) used to score elbow joint cartilage. Descriptive and inferential statistics were carried out using MLwiN and R. RESULTS: Attenuation of the MCP was reduced in dogs with MCD compared with those with no MCD (P < .002). No significant differences were observed in the attenuation between categories of severity (MOS). There was good inter- and intraobserver agreement between measurements (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.89 and 0.95, respectively). CLINICAL RELEVANCE: MCP attenuation is reduced in dogs with MCD compared with dogs with no evidence of MCD. This finding may be a useful tool for early detection of MCD, but there is no relationship with arthroscopic lesion severity.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35895761/