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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog knee joint movement after ligament repair with lateral suture

By Tinga, Selena et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2021·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Femorotibial joint kinematics in nine dogs treated with lateral suture stabilization for complete cranial cruciate ligament rupture.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of nine adult dogs with complete cranial cruciate ligament (CCL) tears underwent a surgical procedure called lateral fabellotibial suture stabilization to help stabilize their knee joints. Before the surgery, the dogs showed significant lameness, scoring an average of 9.3 out of 10, but this improved dramatically to just 0.3 after the procedure. While the surgery helped reduce lameness and improve their ability to walk, the stability of the knee joint was only slightly better six months later compared to before surgery. Overall, the dogs felt more comfortable and were able to move better after treatment.

People also search for: dog knee surgery recovery · CCL tear treatment in dogs · dog lameness improvement after surgery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To quantify 3-D femorotibial joint kinematics during ambulation in dogs with cranial cruciate ligament (CCL) rupture treated with lateral fabellotibial suture stabilization (LFTS). ANIMALS: 9 adult dogs (body weight, 15 to 35 kg [33 to 77 lb]) with unilateral complete CCL rupture. PROCEDURES: Digital 3-D bone models of the femur and fabellae and tibia and fibula were created from CT scans. Lateral fluoroscopic images of stifle joints were collected during treadmill walking before surgery and 6 months after LFTS. The LFTS was performed with nylon leader material secured with knots. Gait cycles were analyzed with a 3-D to 2-D image registration process. Femorotibial joint kinematics (craniocaudal translation, internal-external rotation, and flexion and extension angles) were compared among CCL-deficient stifle joints before LFTS, CCL-deficient stifle joints 6 months after LFTS, and unaffected contralateral (control) stifle joints. Owners and veterinarians subjectively assessed lameness by use of a visual analog scale and gait examination, respectively, at each time point. RESULTS: At midstance phase, medial cranial tibial translation decreased from 9.3 mm before LFTS to 7.6 mm after LFTS but remained increased when compared with control stifle joint values. Following LFTS, axial rotation and stifle joint flexion and extension angles were not significantly different from control stifle joints. On the owner survey, the median walking lameness score improved from 9.3 of 10 before surgery to 0.3 after surgery. On gait examination, median walking lameness score improved from 2 of 4 before surgery to 0 after surgery. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Stifle joint instability was only slightly mitigated at 6 months following LFTS performed with knotted nylon leader material in medium to large dogs with CCL rupture, despite improvement in lameness.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33620247/