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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Osteoarthritis joint damage and disability in cats studied with MRI

By Guillot, Martin et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2012·Groupe de Recherche en Pharmacologie Animale du Qu&#xe9, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of osteoarthritis in cats: novel information from a pilot study.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats with hip joint osteoarthritis (OA) was studied to understand the changes in their joints and how it affected their movement. The researchers used advanced imaging techniques like MRI and pressure-sensitive mats to evaluate the cats' physical abilities. They found that cats with OA had lower activity levels and less force in their limbs compared to healthy cats. This study highlights the importance of using tools like gait analysis to assess how OA impacts cats, which could help in managing their condition better.

People also search for: cat osteoarthritis symptoms · how to help my cat with joint pain · cat hip pain treatment · cat arthritis management · signs of arthritis in cats

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe structural changes associated with osteoarthritis (OA) in cats and to quantify OA-associated disability using functional evaluations. STUDY DESIGN: Cross-sectional pilot study with longitudinal data. ANIMALS: Normal cats (n = 2) and coxofemoral joint OA cats (n = 4) were evaluated by physical examination, radiography, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). METHODS: Structural changes related to OA were scored using computed radiographs (CR) and MRI. Functional evaluation consisted of podobarometric gait analyses performed using a pressure-sensitive mattress and motor activity assessments using collar-attached, accelerometer-based activity sensors. RESULTS: Structural scores for the coxofemoral joint OA-related lesions were lower in normal cats than OA cats for MRI (P = .07). Use of MRI allowed for whole-organ assessment of the coxofemoral joint. Pelvic limb peak vertical ground reaction force (PVF) was higher in normal cats than OA cats (P = .10). During the night, motor activity was greater in normal cats than OA cats (P = .04). PVF was positively correlated with mean motor activity (Spearman coefficient [Rho] = 0.83, P = .04) and negatively correlated with age and MRI structural score (Rho = -0.93 and -0.79, P < .01 and .06, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: This study provides the first description of OA-related lesions in cats using MRI. Gait analysis and accelerometry should be considered as objective tools to characterize OA-associated disability, although these assessments were weakly correlated with structural changes.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22380935/