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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Ultrasonic disk surgery for back disc extrusion in chondrodystrophic

By Forterre, Franck et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2011·Department of Surgery and Radiology·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Microfenestration using the CUSA Excel ultrasonic aspiration system in chondrodystrophic dogs with thoracolumbar disk extrusion: a descriptive cadaveric and clinical study.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Ten chondrodystrophic dogs, including breeds like Beagles, were treated for thoracolumbar disk disease, which can cause back pain and mobility issues. The dogs underwent a surgical procedure using an ultrasonic device to remove damaged disk material. The surgery was quick, taking about 8 minutes per disk, and all dogs recovered well without any signs of complications afterward. This technique appears to be a safe and effective way to treat disk problems in these breeds.

People also search for: dog back pain treatment · Beagle disk disease surgery · chondrodystrophic dog recovery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe an ultrasonic surgical aspirator assisted disk fenestration technique in dogs. STUDY DESIGN: Descriptive cadaveric and prospective clinical study. ANIMALS: Fresh Beagle cadavers (n=5) and 10 chondrodystrophic dogs with thoracolumbar disk extrusion. METHODS: Cadaveric study: Intervertebral disks T12-L2 were fenestrated with the CUSA Excel in 5 Beagle cadavers, and fenestration efficacy assessed by morphologic examination of the completeness of fenestration and size of annulotomy. Clinical study: the affected intervertebral disk was fenestrated in 10 chondrodystrophic dogs treated by hemilaminectomy for thoracolumbar disk disease. Efficacy of fenestration was evaluated. RESULTS: Mean time necessary to perform CUSA assisted fenestration was 8 minutes (range, 5-10 minutes) for each disk in cadavers and patients. In cadaver spines, removal of the nucleus pulposus was complete in 11/15 disks. In 4 disks, remnants of nucleus pulposus material were observed on the contralateral side. Nuclear material was normal in 9/15 disks and showed evidence of chondroid degeneration on histopathologic examination in the 6 disks. Median annulotomy size was 3 mm. Clinically, no signs of early recurrence were observed and all dogs recovered uneventfully. CONCLUSIONS: CUSA assisted fenestration is a safe and efficient method of fenestration for removal of most of the nucleus pulposus through a limited annulotomy.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21175695/