Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with painful tibial nerve injury treated with nerve graft surgery
By Brandstetter, Viktoria et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2024·From Tierarztpraxis am Stadtpark·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Management of an Early-Onset, Painful Tibial Nerve Neuroma Using an Autologous Nerve Graft.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A dog developed sudden lameness and severe pain in its leg just 10 days after surgery for a nerve injury. Despite receiving pain medication for over a week, the dog was still unable to bear weight. After imaging showed an enlarged nerve consistent with a painful neuroma, the veterinarian performed surgery to remove the neuroma and used a piece of the dog's own nerve to repair it. Remarkably, the dog felt immediate relief and was able to walk the day after surgery, eventually making a full recovery six months later.
People also search for: dog leg pain after surgery · dog neuroma treatment · tibial nerve injury in dogs · dog weight-bearing after surgery
Abstract
This case report describes the treatment of a postoperative painful neuroma of the tibial nerve using an autologous nerve graft in a dog. The patient presented with sudden non-weight-bearing lameness 10 days after iatrogenic tibial nerve injury during preparation of a reverse saphenous conduit flap. The dog showed severe pain at the surgical site without nerve deficits. A magnetic resonance imaging examination revealed an enlarged tibial nerve at the injury site, consistent with a neuroma. Analgesics were administered over 11 days, but the patient remained in severe pain and non-weight-bearing. Therefore, surgical resection was recommended. The fusiform neuroma was resected microsurgically, and a saphenous nerve graft was transplanted using an epineural nerve repair technique. Histopathological examination was consistent with a neuroma. The dog showed immediate pain relief and weight-bearing the day after surgery with normal motor function. The dog made a full recovery by the last follow-up 6 mo after surgery. If patients develop pain and lameness following surgery or nerve injury, neuroma formation must be considered, even shortly after surgery. Microsurgical resection and autologous nerve transplantation using an epineural nerve repair technique is a viable method to treat painful neuromas and minimize the risk for recurrence in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38885491/