Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Treating curved upper shin bone fractures in young dogs
By Winter, J et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2022·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Management of proximal metaphyseal curvilinear tibial fractures in 25 skeletally immature dogs (2009 to 2020).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 25 young dogs with tibial fractures (a type of leg bone break) were treated at various veterinary clinics over more than a decade. Most of these fractures happened from minor accidents, and the dogs were treated using different methods, mainly internal fixation (surgery to stabilize the bone). All the fractures healed, and by the time of follow-up, 22 out of 25 dogs were reported to have full use of their legs, while three had acceptable function. This suggests that surgical treatment for these types of fractures in young dogs can lead to good recovery outcomes.
People also search for: dog leg fracture treatment · tibial fracture surgery in dogs · young dog broken leg recovery
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe the occurrence, management and outcome of proximal metaphyseal curvilinear tibial fractures in skeletally immature dogs. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A multi-centre retrospective review was conducted, searching for skeletally immature dogs presenting with proximal metaphyseal curvilinear tibial fractures between January 2009 and September 2020. Signalment, fracture description and case management data were retrieved. Outcome was assessed by retrospectively evaluating follow-up radiographs, hospital records and an owner questionnaire. RESULTS: Twenty-five dogs met the inclusion criteria. All but one fracture was a result of minimal trauma. Twenty fractures were managed with internal fixation, two with external fixation and three conservatively. All 25 fractures healed. Eight major complications occurred in seven of 25 (28%) dogs. Twelve minor complications occurred in 10 of 25 (40%) dogs. Owner questionnaire data were available for 12 of 25 dogs; 11 of 12 were reported as having full function and one of 12 as having acceptable function at the time of questioning (median 34.5 months following presentation). At final follow-up, either by clinical examination or owner questionnaire, full function was achieved in 22 of 25 patients and acceptable function in three of 25. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: This study reported a series of proximal metaphyseal tibial fractures in skeletally immature dogs. The most common fixation method was internal fixation, which frequently resulted in full limb function at final follow-up. Owners reported outcome as fully functional in all dogs that underwent surgery at first presentation and had owner follow-up available, though positive outcomes may have been affected by participation bias.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35137955/