Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Complications of external skeletal fixation for cat leg fractures
By Yeh, Spencer D et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2021·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Description of and complications associated with reinforced, free-form external skeletal fixation for treatment of appendicular fractures in cats: 46 cases (2010-2019).
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 46 cats with broken bones underwent a special surgery called reinforced, free-form external skeletal fixation (rFF-ESF) to help heal their fractures. Most of the cats, 43 out of 46, recovered well, with the fixators being removed after an average of 8 weeks. However, 12 cats experienced complications, with factors like body weight and the type of fracture affecting their recovery. Overall, this technique showed promise for treating fractures in cats, but more research is needed to compare it with other methods.
People also search for: cat broken bone treatment · external fixator for cat fractures · complications after cat surgery
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe a modified technique for reinforced, free-form external skeletal fixation (rFF-ESF) of appendicular fractures in cats and identify factors associated with development of complications. ANIMALS: 46 cats with fractures repaired with rFF-ESF at Angell Animal Medical Center between 2010 and 2019. PROCEDURES: Medical records were reviewed for information on signalment, affected bone, fracture location and orientation, degree of comminution, severity (open vs closed), fixator type, number of fixation pins, use of an intramedullary pin (yes vs no), surgeon experience (staff surgeon vs surgical resident), anesthesia time, surgery time, perioperative antimicrobial administration, concurrent surgical procedures, intraoperative complications, postoperative alignment, whether fixator destabilization was performed, and time to complete fixator removal. Postoperative complications were recorded. RESULTS: 43 of the 46 (93%) cats had a successful outcome, with a median time to complete fixator removal of 8 weeks (range, 3 to 61 weeks). Twelve of the 46 (26%) cats had major (n = 3) or minor (9) complications. In univariable analyses, 4 factors were significantly associated with development of postoperative complications: body weight (OR for each 1-kg increase in weight, 1.8), tibial fracture (vs fracture of any other long bone; OR, 16), use of a type 2 fixator (vs a type 1 fixator; OR, 11), and use of destabilization (vs no destabilization; 7). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results indicated that rFF-ESF can be successfully used to stabilize a variety of appendicular fractures in cats. Further studies are required to compare rFF-ESF with other fracture fixation methods.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34388012/