Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with ischial bone cancer treated by limb-sparing surgery
By Oblak, Michelle L & Boston, Sarah E·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2015·Ontario Veterinary College, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Ischiectomy With Limb Preservation for a Dog With Ischial Chondrosarcoma: Case Report and Surgical Technique.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
An 11-year-old spayed female mixed breed dog was brought in for hindlimb lameness, and X-rays revealed a bone tumor called chondrosarcoma in her left ischium. The veterinarian performed a surgery called ischiectomy, which removed the affected bone while preserving the limb. After surgery, the dog initially had some lameness but gradually regained good use of her hind leg. Over 500 days later, she was still doing well with no signs of the cancer returning.
People also search for: dog hindlimb lameness treatment · chondrosarcoma in dogs · ischiectomy surgery for dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe the surgical technique for ischiectomy in the dog and to report the procedure in a case. STUDY DESIGN: Case report. ANIMAL: An 11-year-old spayed female mixed breed dog with chondrosarcoma of the ischium. METHODS: The dog presented for hindlimb lameness and evaluation after a radiographic finding of a lytic lesion confined to the left ischium. Following staging and confirmation of stage 1 disease, an ischiectomy with preservation of the hindlimb was performed. RESULTS: The dog recovered from surgery and was initially moderately lame on the hindlimb. Over time, the dog regained satisfactory hindlimb use and was alive >500 days postoperative with no evidence of local recurrence or metastatic disease. CONCLUSIONS: Ischiectomy with hindlimb preservation is a technically straight-forward procedure and in this case, resulted in good hindlimb function postoperatively. The procedure should be considered for the treatment of dogs with bone tumors confined to the ischium.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25323202/