Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Common injuries and causes in dogs doing agility training
By Cullen, Kimberley L et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2013·Ontario Veterinary College, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Internet-based survey of the nature and perceived causes of injury to dogs participating in agility training and competition events.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A survey of over 3,800 dogs involved in agility training found that about one-third had experienced at least one injury, with the most common areas affected being the shoulder, back, neck, and toes. Many of these injuries were soft tissue issues like strains and sprains, often occurring during jumps and climbing obstacles. The survey also revealed that handlers believed certain activities were linked to these injuries. Understanding these patterns can help improve safety and prevent injuries in agility dogs in the future.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To characterize injuries (on the basis of type and severity of injury and affected region of the body) among dogs participating in agility training and competition events and examine associations between injury characteristics and perceived causes of injury. DESIGN: Internet-based, retrospective, cross-sectional survey. ANIMALS: 3,801 privately owned dogs participating in agility training or trials. PROCEDURES: A retrospective electronic survey was developed to investigate demographic factors for dogs and handlers, frequency of participation in agility training and competition, and perceived causes and characteristics of injuries acquired by dogs during agility-related activities. Respondents were handlers recruited through member lists of large canine agility associations in Canada and the United Kingdom and through promotion on an agility blog site. Associations between cause and anatomic site or type of injury and between injury severity (mild vs severe) and setting (competition vs practice) were investigated. RESULTS: Surveys were received from 1,669 handlers of 3,801 agility dogs internationally. Handler-reported data indicated 1,209 of 3,801 (32%) dogs had ≥ 1 injury; of 1,523 analyzed injuries, the shoulder (349 injuries), back (282), and neck (189) regions and phalanges (202) were predominantly affected. Soft tissue injuries (eg, strain [muscle or tendon injury; 807], sprain [ligament injury; 312], and contusion [200]) were common. Injuries were most commonly incurred during interactions with bar jumps, A-frames, and dog walk obstacles (260, 235, and 177 of 1,602 injuries, respectively). Anatomic site and type of injury were significantly associated with perceived cause of injury. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: These findings provided a basis for further experimental studies to identify specific mechanisms of various types of injury in dogs that participate in agility activities.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24050568/