Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Femoral cortical thickness index in a population of dogs undergoing total hip replacement.
- Journal:
- Veterinary surgery : VS
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Pfund, Charlotte B & Wendelburg, Kirk L
- Affiliation:
- VCA Animal Specialty Group · United States
- Species:
- dog
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To establish a femoral cortical thickness index (CTI) for dogs undergoing total hip replacement (THR), determine the reproducibility of the established CTI measurements, and assess the efficacy of CTI as a preoperative variable in the femoral fracture/fissure occurrence in dogs undergoing THR. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective study. ANIMALS: A total of 224 dogs with THR. METHODS: Medical records for dogs undergoing THR were reviewed retrospectively, analyzing only the first side in dogs with bilateral THR. Three measuring points were defined on preoperative mediolateral radiographs: immediately distal to the lesser trochanter, one-quarter-, and midway down the femur. The CTI was calculated from the mean cortical and femoral diaphyseal diameters at the established locations. A total of 10 dogs with varying CTI scores were selected for interobserver comparisons and pre-/ postoperative analyses. The relationship between CTI and perioperative fissure/fracture risk was then evaluated. RESULTS: Interobserver and pre-/ postoperative measurement comparisons showed near-perfect correlation. Analysis of 224 dogs revealed a significant association between lower CTI and incidence of perioperative fractures (p < .0001). The mean CTI for all dogs was 0.285, while it was statistically lower at 0.246 for dogs that sustained fissures/fractures. No other statistically significant risk factors were identified. CONCLUSION: This study quantitatively assessed femoral cortical thickness in dogs undergoing THR. The findings confirmed that lower CTI is a repeatable and accurate predisposing factor for perioperative fissure/fracture risk in canine THR. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Factoring CTI into the clinical decision making may minimize fracture risk, especially in dogs with other possible risk factors such as abnormal BCS.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40495706/