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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Effect of artery injury on bone healing after dog knee surgery

By Ferrari, Francesco et al.·Published in Research in veterinary science·2024·Department of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Sciences (DIVAS), Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Effect of cranial tibial artery laceration on radiographic bone healing and perioperative complications in dogs undergoing tibial plateau leveling osteotomy.

Species:
dog
Movement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs undergoing a surgical procedure called tibial plateau leveling osteotomy (TPLO) experienced a laceration of the cranial tibial artery, which could potentially affect healing. The study found that while larger dogs (over 15 kg) were more likely to have this artery lacerated, it did not significantly delay bone healing or lead to more complications during recovery. In fact, despite the injury, the dogs healed well, and the surgery was successful. This suggests that the blood supply in a dog's leg can compensate for such injuries during recovery.

People also search for: dog TPLO surgery complications · cranial tibial artery injury in dogs · dog bone healing after surgery

Abstract

During tibial plateau leveling osteotomy (TPLO), the laceration of the cranial tibial artery (LCTA) may occur, and the ligation of the cranial tibial artery might lead to impaired blood supply to the osteotomy site. The present case-control study aimed to evaluate the effect of LCTA on TPLO healing and the occurrence of perioperative complications. The incidence and predisposing factors to LCTA were also investigated. Fourteen cases experiencing LCTA were retrospectively enrolled from medical records of two veterinary teaching hospitals (LCTA group), whereas 28 randomly selected TPLOs that did not experience LCTA were included in the control group. Signalment data, proximal tibial epiphysis conformation, osteotomy features, perioperative complications, and bone healing were compared between the two groups. Bone healing was evaluated using the modified radiographic union scale for tibial fracture and the visual analog scale. The mean incidence was 9.6%. Bodyweight was significantly higher in the LCTA group compared to the control group (P = 0.009). Dogs belonging to the LCTA groups were significantly younger (P = 0.01). Intraoperative hypotension was significantly overreported in the LCTA group (P = 0.0001). None of the other variables differed significantly between the two groups. Dogs' size seems to be a predisposing factor, with dogs weighing >15 kg having 22 times more chance of experiencing LCTA. Due to the well-developed collateral blood supply of the canine hindlimb, LCTA and the closure of the cranial tibial artery did not appear to delay the radiographic bone healing or affect the incidence of perioperative complications.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38851052/