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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Hip denervation effects on walking force in dogs with hip dysplasia

By Lister, S. A. et al.·Published in Veterinary and Comparative Orthopaedics and Traumatology·2009·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Ground reaction force analysis of unilateral coxofemoral denervation for the treatment of canine hip dysplasia

Species:
dog
Hip dysplasiaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with hip dysplasia underwent a procedure called unilateral coxofemoral denervation to help relieve their pain and improve their walking. Initially, the treated leg was more painful, but by three months, there was no significant difference in how the dogs used both legs. While some dogs showed a decrease in strength in the unoperated leg over time, the overall results suggested that the treatment was effective in reducing pain and improving mobility. More follow-up would be needed to see long-term benefits, but many dogs seemed to be doing better after the procedure.

People also search for: dog hip dysplasia treatment · coxofemoral denervation for dogs · improving dog mobility after surgery

Abstract

SummaryCoxofemoral denervation has success rates of 90–96% reported retrospectively for palliative treatment of hip dysplasia. The aim of this study was to objectively evaluate ground reaction forces (GRF) in dysplastic dogs after unilateral denervation. Unilateral coxofemoral denervation was performed by means of a previously reported technique on 10 dogs with asymmetric gait. GRF were measured at zero, one and three months. Statistical analysis was performed using repeated measures analysis of variance and paired t-tests, with p≤0.05. There was a lack of significant difference in mean peak vertical force (PVF) or vertical impulse (VI) in the operated limb (TX) over time. For the unoperated limb (UnTX), mean PVF and VI significantly decreased over time. The dogs were significantly more lame in the TX limb initially and at one month, however, there was no significant difference between limbs by three months. In the UnTX limb, 40% of dogs decreased PVF by >5%, by three months. Over time, there was no significant difference in mean average rise or mean average fall for TX or UnTX limbs. Between limbs, mean rise in the TX limb was significantly less at zero months, but not at one or three months. Decreased compensatory load shifting to the UnTX limb due to procedural efficacy could explain decreases in the UnTX limb. Worsening disease could also explain decreases in the UnTX limb, and may indicate a protective effect denoted by a lack of change in the TX limb. Longer follow-up would be required in improved dogs in order to document continued efficacy.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.3415/vcot-08-02-0024