Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with broken back bones fixed using traction and locking plates
By William J. Tammaro et al.·Published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science·2022·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: Diagnostic traction and dorsal locking plate stabilization of a fifth and sixth thoracic vertebral fracture/luxation in a golden retriever: Case report
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 2-year-old female spayed golden retriever was brought to the vet after being hit by a car, showing signs of weakness in her back legs but still able to feel pain. CT scans revealed fractures and dislocation in her spine. The vet performed surgery to stabilize her spine using special plates, and after just six days, she was recovering well and walking again. At her follow-up appointment eight weeks later, she was back to normal with no complications from the surgery.
People also search for: golden retriever spinal injury treatment · dog hit by car recovery · dog back leg weakness after accident
Abstract
Traction was used to diagnose instability of a T5-T6 traumatic luxation that was stabilized with locking plates in the laminae and dorsal pedicles. A two-year-old, 27 kg, female spayed golden retriever was presented to a veterinary teaching hospital after being referred for possible mandibular and spinal fractures after being hit by a car. The dog presented non-ambulatory paraparetic with intact pain perception. Computed tomographic (CT) imaging showed a fifth and sixth thoracic vertebral fracture/luxation, with and without manual traction. Surgical stabilization of the spine was performed with bilateral dorsally placed locking plates (String-of-Pearls, Orthomed, UK) in the laminae and dorsal aspects of the vertebral pedicles. The dog recovered well, and neurologic status improved significantly overnight and continued to improve up until discharge, which was 6 days postoperatively. Upon recheck exam at 8 weeks postoperatively, the dog appeared neurologically normal with no obvious surgical complications. This case demonstrates that diagnostic traction—the process of pulling, during imaging, on the dog's pelvis while the forelimbs are secured in extension—demonstrated instability of the spine which was not readily apparent on initial CT imaging. Additionally, the dorsal locking plate stabilization is a viable fixation option that provided acceptable stabilization of the mid-thoracic vertebrae.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/36619957