Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Surgery to fix stuck hip replacements in four dogs with bad hip
By Jeon, YoungJin et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2025·Department of Veterinary Surgery, South Korea·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Distal femoral shortening osteotomy for managing irreducible hips during total hip replacement in four dogs with severe luxoid hips.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 5-year-old Labrador with severe hip problems was brought in for surgery after other treatments failed. The veterinarian performed a total hip replacement but found that the new hip joint couldn't be put back in place. To fix this, they used a technique called distal femoral shortening osteotomy (DFSO), which helped secure the new joint. After the surgery, all dogs had successful hip joint reductions, and most regained good to excellent limb function over the following months. However, two dogs experienced complications, one needing further surgery to fix a loose implant.
People also search for: dog hip replacement surgery · Labrador hip problems treatment · distal femoral shortening osteotomy for dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe the surgical technique and clinical outcomes of distal femoral shortening osteotomy (DFSO) to facilitate prosthesis reduction in dogs with irreducible luxoid hips undergoing total hip replacement (THR). ANIMALS: Four client-owned dogs with luxoid hips. STUDY DESIGN: Short case series. METHODS: Standard THR was performed to alleviate pain and restore limb function. After confirming the prostheses were non-reducible, DFSO was performed as a novel tension-relieving technique at a level that allowed internal fixation. The shortening length was determined by the intraoperative tension required to reduce and maintain the prosthesis. Data from medical records were collected, including signalment, clinical signs, implant used, shortening length, and outcomes. RESULTS: Following DFSO, prosthesis reduction was successful in all dogs. The median femoral shortening length ratio was 13.8% (range, 10.7%-15.3%). One intraoperative complication involved a fissure of the greater trochanter, which occurred during trial reduction before DFSO. Median duration of follow-up was 21 months (range, 3-34 months). Two dogs showed good to excellent limb function. Bone union was consistently achieved in all DFSO procedures. Two postoperative complications were observed: one case of prosthesis luxation and one case of aseptic stem loosening. The owner declined revision surgery for luxation, and explantation was performed for the stem loosening. CONCLUSION: DFSO could effectively manage irreducible prostheses in dogs with luxoid hips when conventional methods fail. However, careful case selection and meticulous surgical planning were essential to avoid complications.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40159851/