Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Footpad lacerations in pet and military dogs and their recovery
By Hansen, Lane A et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2015·and Colorado State University, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Distribution, Complications, and Outcome of Footpad Injuries in Pet and Military Working Dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 120 dogs, including pets and military working dogs, suffered from footpad injuries, mostly lacerations on their front paws. Many of these dogs were middle-aged male dogs, and about a quarter experienced short-term complications, but none had long-term issues or disabilities after healing. Dogs with deeper lacerations faced a higher risk of complications and took longer to heal compared to those with less severe injuries. Interestingly, treatments like bandaging or surgical repair didn’t seem to help with healing or reduce complications for the more serious injuries. Most dogs healed well overall, returning to normal activity.
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Abstract
This study reports the findings of 120 traumatic pad injuries in pet and military dogs. Most dogs (68%) presented with a laceration to a thoracic limb footpad, and one-third of dogs were middle-aged castrated males. Metacarpal pads were most commonly injured. Short-term complications were noted in 27% of dogs. No long-term complications were identified. No disability from pad injury was present at the completion of healing. Concurrent injuries to adjacent structures were uncommon and did not affect outcome. Dogs with full-thickness pad lacerations were at greater risk for major short-term complications compared to dogs with partial-thickness pad lacerations (odds ratio, 7.27; P = .001). Military working dogs with full-thickness pad lacerations were at greater risk for major short-term complications than pet dogs with a similar injury. When major complications developed in dogs with full-thickness pad injuries, time to final healing was significantly longer (by a median of 12 days). The partial-thickness pad lesions healed uneventfully regardless of whether they were bandaged, surgically repaired, or left to heal by second intention. Suture repair and bandaging of full-thickness lesions could not be shown to either decrease the risk for complications or improve healing. Future work should focus on establishing standards for footpad treatment to reduce complications.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26083442/