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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Shockwave therapy helps Bernese mountain dog with chronic shoulder

By Venzin, C et al.·Published in Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde·2004·University of Berne. claudio.venzin@kkh.unibe.ch·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Extracorporeal shockwave therapy in a dog with chronic bicipital tenosynovitis.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 15-month-old spayed female Bernese mountain dog was brought in for chronic lameness in her left front leg. Despite being treated with pain medication and rest, she showed little improvement. After further tests, she was diagnosed with chronic bicipital tenosynovitis (inflammation of a tendon in the shoulder) and underwent three sessions of extracorporeal shockwave therapy. This treatment led to significant improvement, with only mild lameness observed after exercise during follow-ups. However, six months later, some mild degenerative joint disease was noted on imaging.

People also search for: dog shoulder pain treatment · Bernese mountain dog lameness · extracorporeal shockwave therapy for dogs

Abstract

A 15-month-old, spayed female, Bernese mountain dog was presented to the Institute of Small Animal Surgery at the University of Zurich because of chronic left forelimb lameness. The referring veterinarian diagnosed pain in the left shoulder region and had treated the dog with systemic non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and restricted exercise for a two-week period. The follow-up examination revealed only minimal improvement and therefore, the dog was referred for further diagnostic evaluation. Chronic bicipital tenosynovitis and tendinitis of the infraspinatus muscle was diagnosed based on survey radiographs, arthrography, ultrasound, computed tomography (CT), and synovial fluid cytology. The dog underwent three sessions of extracorporeal shockwave therapy and substantial clinical improvement was observed. On follow-up examinations, only mild left forelimb lameness was evident following exercise, and changes in the intertubercular groove and at the supraglenoid tuberosity appeared less active on radiographs and CT. However, six months following treatment, mild degenerative joint disease was apparent.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15060978/