Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Large skin wound repair on dog lower leg using genicular flap
By Ober, Ciprian et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2019·University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Evaluation of a genicular axial pattern flap to repair large cutaneous tibial defects in two dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 2-year-old male Labrador Retriever and a 14-year-old female mixed breed dog both had large skin wounds on their legs that needed repair. The Labrador's wound was from a tumor removal, while the mixed breed's was from a car accident. Both dogs underwent surgery using a special technique called a genicular axial pattern flap to cover the defects. After surgery, both dogs were able to walk normally, but the Labrador had a small area that reopened a couple of weeks later. By two months post-surgery, the mixed breed's wound had completely healed, while the Labrador still had a small area that needed attention.
People also search for: dog leg wound treatment · Labrador tumor removal recovery · mixed breed dog car accident injury
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical outcome after cutaneous reconstruction using genicular artery flaps has not been reported. Major cutaneous defects of the pelvic limb between the stifle and hock are frequent in dogs and closure is difficult due to lack of available skin from immediately adjacent areas. CASE PRESENTATION: Here we report the first two clinical cases successfully managed by genicular axial pattern flap closure. A 2-year-old 38 kg (83.77-lb) intact male Labrador Retriever and a 14-year-old 42 kg (92.59-lb) spayed mixed breed female dog were admitted for the management of large skin defects in the lateral tibiotarsal joint. One defect was the result of a fibrosarcoma removal in the Labrador dog and the other defect was a chronic large wound caused by a car accident in the mixed breed female dog. Both defects were reconstructed by using genicular flaps. The bed of the wound in mixed breed dog was surgically debrided and underwent open wound management until a proper granulation tissue bed was formed before reconstruction. The skin defect in the Labrador dog was covered immediately after tumor removal. After surgery both dogs were bearing weight on the limbs normally. Small area of dehiscence occurred in both dogs 2 weeks after surgery. At follow-up examination one month after surgery, the surgical wound of the Labrador retriever still had a small area of dehiscence. Two months after surgery, the wound of the mixed breed dog was completely healed, covered with hair and no lameness was observed. CONCLUSION: Findings suggested that genicular axial pattern flap is a good option for reconstruction of large cutaneous defects of the lateral aspects of the tibia in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31118000/