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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog limping after being hit by ATV - how surgery helped

By Johnson, M D et al.·Published in Australian veterinary journal·2017·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Intraoperative use of a transarticular circular fixator construct to facilitate reduction and stabilisation of a proximal tibial physeal fracture in a dog.

Species:
dog
Dog limpingMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A 4-month-old female American Pit Bull Terrier was brought to the vet for limping on her right leg after being hit by an all-terrain vehicle. X-rays showed a serious fracture in her knee area that was difficult to fix with standard methods. The vet used a special circular fixator to help pull the broken pieces apart and align them correctly without causing more damage. After surgery, the dog healed well, and the fracture showed signs of healing just 19 days later.

People also search for: puppy limping after injury · dog knee fracture treatment · American Pit Bull Terrier surgery recovery

Abstract

CASE REPORT: A 4-month-old female intact American Pit Bull Terrier was presented for right pelvic limb lameness 1 day after the dog had been hit by an all-terrain vehicle. Orthogonal radiographs of the right stifle revealed a Salter-Harris type IV fracture through the proximal tibial physis extending caudodistally through the proximal tibial metaphysis. The distal tibia was markedly displaced cranially, laterally and proximally, resulting in complete overriding of the fracture segments. An open approach was made in order to facilitate direct reduction, but the fracture could not be sufficiently distracted and the epiphyseal segment remained fixed caudal to the remainder of the tibia. Concerns regarding possible iatrogenic trauma to the epiphysis prompted the use of a transarticular circular fixator construct to distract the fracture segments to facilitate reduction. Distraction that facilitated reduction was performed using three TrueLok Rapid Quick Adjust Struts that were positioned between the two ring components. The struts also allowed for multiplanar adjustment of alignment, which allowed the fracture to be maintained in anatomic reduction as divergent interfragmentary Kirschner wires were placed. Radiographic union was confirmed 19 days after surgery. CONCLUSION/CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Transient intraoperative application of a circular construct incorporating the TrueLok components facilitated accurate fracture reduction without inflicting further iatrogenic trauma to the epiphysis, after traditional direct reduction techniques proved ineffective, and afforded a successful clinical outcome in the dog reported here.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28444758/