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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Fracture repair outcomes in dogs and cats using PAX plates

By Barnhart, Matthew D et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2013·MedVet Medical and Cancer Centers, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Fracture repair using a polyaxial locking plate system (PAX).

Movement & joints

Plain-English summary

A group of 60 dogs and 2 cats with broken bones were treated using a special type of surgical plate called the polyaxial locking plate system (PAX). Most pets healed well, with an average recovery time of about 7 weeks, though some experienced complications, including plate failure in a few cases. Factors like having multiple injuries or being older seemed to affect how quickly they healed. Overall, the PAX system worked effectively for repairing fractures, similar to other methods used in veterinary medicine.

People also search for: dog broken bone treatment · cat fracture recovery time · polyaxial locking plate system for pets

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To report outcomes and complications of dog and cat fractures treated with the polyaxial locking plate system (PAX). STUDY DESIGN: Case series. ANIMALS: Dogs (n = 60) and 2 cats. METHODS: Medical records (December 2009-March 2011) of dogs and cats with fractures treated with the PAX system were reviewed. Cases with adequate follow-up to document a functional union, had surgery performed by an author, had no prior treatment of the fracture(s), and with complete operative records were included. Signalment, body weight, bone(s) fractured, area of bone fractured, fracture classification, concurrent orthopedic injuries, complications, time to functional union, if minimally invasive plate osteosynthesis (MIPO) techniques were used, plate size, number of plates, bone graft use, and ancillary methods of fixation were recorded. Additionally, fracture segment: plate length, screw, number of plate holes, number of empty screw holes overlying/adjacent to the fractures, number of cortices engaged above/below the fracture was evaluated. Variables were evaluated statistically for effect on complications and functional union. RESULTS: Sixty-two animals were included. Mean time to functional union was 7.1 weeks. Complications occurred in 12 animals (19%) and plate failure occurred in 3 (5%). Statistically significant factors that affected time to functional union were the presence of multiple injuries and age. Those associated with complications were double plates and number of cortices engaged above and below fractures. CONCLUSIONS: The PAX system allows for multidirectional screw insertion with an overall complication rate and time to functional union similar to other fracture repair implant systems.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23110434/