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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Fibular bone cut helps rotate tibia in dog knee surgery

By Zuckerman, Joshua S et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2018·Veterinary Specialty and Emergency Center, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Fibular osteotomy to facilitate proximal tibial rotation during tibial plateau leveling osteotomy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs undergoing surgery for knee problems had some issues with their tibia (the main bone in the lower leg) not rotating properly. This was especially common in dogs with a condition called tibiofibular synostosis, where the fibula (the smaller bone in the lower leg) is fused to the tibia. To help these dogs, veterinarians performed a fibular osteotomy (removing a piece of the fibula) along with the main surgery. This approach improved the rotation of the tibia, allowing for better outcomes in their recovery.

People also search for: dog knee surgery recovery · tibial plateau leveling osteotomy for dogs · fibular osteotomy in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify factors that restrict proximal tibial rotation during tibial plateau leveling osteotomy (TPLO) and report on the outcome of concurrent fibular osteotomy (TPLO-FO). STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective case-control study. ANIMALS: Dogs undergoing TPLO-FO (n = 23) and dogs undergoing routine TPLO (n = 49). METHODS: Medical records and radiographs of dogs that had undergone TPLO-FO were reviewed. Data that were collected included signalment, preoperative tibial plateau angle (TPA), mechanical medial proximal tibial angle (mMPTA), postoperative and recheck TPA and mMPTA, ratio of fibular width to tibial width (FW:TW), presence of tibiofibular synostosis, tibial osteotomy location, and use of additional implants. RESULTS: The odds of exhibiting rotational constraints requiring FO during TPLO were 62-fold greater in dogs with tibiofibular synostosis than in dogs without synostosis. Dogs with FW:TW greater than 0.24 were 7.8-fold more likely to exhibit rotational constraints. After TPLO-FO, the postoperative increase in TPA was greater after single-plate fixation (mean, 5.4 ° ± 4.5 °) compared with fixation with 2 plates (mean, 1.4 ° ± 0.6 °). CONCLUSION: Proximal tibiofibular synostosis and a relatively wide fibula restricted tibial plateau rotation. In these dogs, concurrent fibular osteotomy allowed adequate rotation. Adjunct plate fixation limited loss of rotation after TPLO-FO. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Successful TPLO relies on adequate rotation of the proximal tibial segment. Fibular osteotomy and adjunct plate fixation are recommended to achieve and maintain adequate rotation of the osteotomized tibia in dogs with rotational constraints.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30239027/