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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Iliopsoas muscle injury in dogs doing agility sports

By Fry, Lindsey M et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·Red Sage Integrative Veterinary Partners Rehabilitation Clinic, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Internet Survey Evaluation of Iliopsoas Injury in Dogs Participating in Agility Competitions.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A survey of agility dogs found that 7.8% reported iliopsoas injuries, which affect the hip area and can lead to significant downtime. Border Collies and dogs trained using specific methods were at higher risk, while those not originally acquired for agility had a lower risk. Most owners sought veterinary care, with treatments including rest, rehabilitation, and medications. About 80% of the injured dogs returned to competing within six months, although some needed longer or retired from the sport altogether.

People also search for: dog iliopsoas injury treatment · Border Collie agility injury · dog rehabilitation after injury · agility dog training risks

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe risk factors associated with demographics, training, and competition for iliopsoas injury in dogs participating in agility competitions, as well as describe owner reported treatment and return to sport following injury. PROCEDURES: An internet-based survey of agility handlers collected risk factor data for dogs participating in agility. Owners were asked questions about demographics, training, and competition as well as injury treatment and recovery if applicable. Associations between variables of interest and iliopsoas injury were estimated with logistic regression. The final risk factor model was built via modified backward selection, with all variables in the final model showing significant associations at< 0.05. RESULTS: Of the 4,197 dogs in the sample, 327 (7.8%) reported iliopsoas injury. The final model identified six risk factors for iliopsoas injury. A higher risk of iliopsoas injury was observed for the Border Collie breed, dogs with handlers who are veterinary assistants, dogs competing on dirt, dogs competing on artificial turf 6+ times a year, and dogs that trained with the 2 &#xd7; 2 method for weave poles. Dogs that were not acquired with agility in mind were observed to have a decreased risk of injury. Factors like number of competition days and jump height were not significantly associated with risk of iliopsoas injury. Owners sought veterinary care for 88% of dogs with iliopsoas injury, including specialty care for 63%. Treatment most often included rest, home rehabilitation, formal rehabilitation, and/or oral medications. Most dogs (80%) were able to return to sport within 6 months, while 20% were out for longer than 6 months, or retired. CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Iliopsoas injury can necessitate a significant amount of time off from training and competition, and even lead to retirement of dogs competing in agility. Some of the risk factors identified in this study can inherently not be modified (breed, intended use, and handler profession), but can be taken into consideration for injury prevention strategies. Competition and training risk factors that can be modified, such as weave training, may help to inform guidelines for best practices in management of the agility athlete.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35873675/