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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Migrated bone fragment in dog's biceps tendon after shoulder

By Brandstetter, Viktoria et al.·Published in Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe K, Kleintiere/Heimtiere·2023·Tierklinik Hofheim, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Detection of fragment migration into the biceps tendon sheath originating from a humeral osteochondrosis lesion - A case report and review of the literature.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 6-month-old male Hovawart was brought in for chronic lameness in his left front leg. Initial X-rays showed a problem in the shoulder joint, but further tests using a CT scan and ultrasound revealed a small bone fragment lodged in the biceps tendon sheath, causing inflammation. The vet performed arthroscopic surgery to remove the fragment, and the dog fully recovered, with no lameness reported during a follow-up a year later. This case highlights the importance of advanced imaging techniques for diagnosing shoulder issues in dogs.

People also search for: dog lameness left front leg · Hovawart shoulder pain treatment · dog osteochondrosis surgery recovery

Abstract

The purpose of this report is to demonstrate that radiographic evaluation of the canine shoulder joint alone is not sensitive enough to detect migrated osteochondral fragments within the biceps tendon sheath, as a sequela to osteochondrosis dissecans of the caudal humeral head. A 6-months-old, male, 35 kg Hovawart was referred due to chronic intermittent lameness on the left forelimb. Survey radiographs revealed a semilunar radiolucency surrounded by a moderately sclerotic rim at the caudal aspect of the left humeral head, referred to as osteochondrosis dissecans. However, only computed tomography combined with ultrasonography could clearly confirm a dislodged osteochondral fragment within the left biceps tendon sheath and a consequent tenosynovitis. Arthroscopic treatment on the clinically affected left forelimb followed by an additional approach over the left biceps tendon sheath to remove the migrated fragment resulted in a complete remission of the lameness until the last follow-up one year after surgery. In our opinion, computed tomography should be applied in the medical work up of canine shoulder osteochondrosis (OC) as standard. Combined with ultrasonography, it can further aid in complete evaluation of the shoulder joint and reliable exclusion of displaced osteochondral fragments, which might also be missed during arthroscopy when located too far distally.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37230117/