Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Major complications after surgery for medial patellar luxation in 124
By Cashmore, R G et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative orthopaedics and traumatology : V.C.O.T·2014·Small Animal Specialist Hospital, Australia·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Major complications and risk factors associated with surgical correction of congenital medial patellar luxation in 124 dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with congenital medial patellar luxation (a knee joint issue) underwent surgery to correct the problem, but some faced major complications afterward. About 18.5% of these surgeries resulted in issues that required further surgery, with the most common being problems related to the implants used. However, using a specific surgical technique called recession trochleoplasty along with tibial tuberosity transposition significantly reduced the chances of the knee slipping out of place again. Overall, dogs with less severe luxations had fewer complications, and using a tension band during surgery helped prevent certain issues.
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Abstract
Dogs treated for congenital medial patellar luxation were reviewed for the purpose of determining the incidence of postoperative major complications requiring surgical revision and the risk factors for their occurrence. Major complications occurred in 18.5% of the patellar luxation stabilization procedures with implant associated complications being the most frequent, patellar reluxation the second, and tibial tuberosity avulsion the third most common major complication. Other complications included patellar ligament rupture and trochlear wedge displacement. When recession trochleoplasty was performed in addition to tibial tuberosity transposition, a 5.1-fold reduction in the rate of patellar reluxation was observed. Release of the cranial belly of the sartorius muscle further reduced the incidence of patellar reluxation, while patella alta (pre- or postoperative) and patellar luxation grade were not found to influence the rate of reluxation. Tibial tuberosity avulsion was 11.1-times more likely when using a single Kirschner wire to stabilize a transposition, compared with two Kirschner wires. Independent to the number of Kirschner wires used, the more caudodistally the Kirschner wires were directed, the higher the risk for tibial tuberosity avulsion. Tension bands were used in 24.4% of the transpositions with no tuberosity avulsion occurring in stifles stabilized with a tension band. Overall, grade 1 luxations had a significantly lower incidence of major complications than other grades, while body weight, age, sex, and bilateral patellar stabilization were not associated with risk of major complication development.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24817090/