Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How osteoarthritis changes hip joint X-rays in Labrador Retrievers
By Gold, Randi M et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2009·Department of Clinical Studies, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effects of osteoarthritis on radiographic measures of laxity and congruence in hip joints of Labrador Retrievers.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 40 Labrador Retrievers was studied to see how hip joint osteoarthritis affected their hip joint stability over time. The dogs were divided into two groups: those who developed osteoarthritis and those who did not. It was found that as osteoarthritis progressed, the hip joints became looser, indicated by changes in specific measurements taken from X-rays. The study suggests that the compression index (a measure of joint fit) could be useful for detecting early signs of hip joint osteoarthritis in dogs.
People also search for: Labrador Retriever hip pain · dog osteoarthritis symptoms · hip joint treatment for dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVE- To determine effects of hip joint osteoarthritis on radiographic measures of hip joint laxity and congruence. DESIGN- Longitudinal study. ANIMALS- 40 Labrador Retrievers. PROCEDURES- Dogs were assigned to 2 groups based on radiographic evidence of osteoarthritis. Dogs in the osteoarthritis group were free of osteoarthritis at initial radiographic evaluation (t(1)) and developed osteoarthritis by a subsequent radiographic evaluation (t(2)). Dogs in the nonosteoarthritis group had no radiographic osteoarthritis at either evaluation. Hip joint laxity was quantified by use of the distraction index (DI) from a distraction radiographic view and use of the Norberg angle (NA) from a ventrodorsal hip-extended radiographic view. The compression index (CI) from a compression radiographic view was used as a measure of joint congruence (concentricity). RESULTS- Hip joint laxity (NA or DI) did not change over time in the nonosteoarthritis group. Mean hip joint laxity (NA and DI) for the osteoarthritis group was greater at t(1) than for the nonosteoarthritis group. With the onset of osteoarthritis, mean NA decreased significantly and mean CI increased significantly, but mean DI remained unchanged. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE- No radiographic evidence for compensatory hip joint tightening associated with osteoarthritis was detected. Hip-extended radiography revealed that hip joints got looser with osteoarthritis and NA decreased. Hip joint laxity (DI) on distraction radiographs was unchanged by the onset of osteoarthritis and remained constant in the osteoarthritis and nonosteoarthritis groups at both evaluations. However, the CI increased with osteoarthritis, as reflected in nonzero indices (incongruence). The CI may be a valid marker for early hip joint osteoarthritis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19527128/