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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Treating puppy carpal contracture with rest or bandaging outcomes

By Petazzoni, Massimo et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2021·Clinica Veterinaria Milano Sud, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Outcome of rest with or without bandaging for treatment of carpal flexural contracture deformities in puppies: 47 puppies and 75 joints (2000-2018).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 47 puppies with carpal flexural contracture deformities (a condition where the wrist is bent and can't straighten) were treated either with rest alone or rest plus a bandage. All the puppies improved, regaining normal movement and full extension of their wrists within an average of about 3 weeks. Puppies with more severe deformities (grade 3) recovered faster when treated with both rest and bandaging compared to just rest. This suggests that while both treatments work, adding a bandage can help severely affected puppies heal more quickly.

People also search for: puppy carpal flexural contracture treatment · dog wrist bending problem · puppy recovery time from bandage

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To review outcome of dogs with carpal flexural contracture deformities treated with rest alone or with rest and bandaging. ANIMALS: 47 dogs (75 joints). PROCEDURES: Medical records of dogs with unilateral or bilateral carpal flexural contracture deformities were reviewed, and dogs were grouped according to deformity severity grade (graded on a scale from 1 to 3) at the time of diagnosis. Two treatment groups were compared: rest only and rest with a modified Robert-Jones bandage. All dogs were reevaluated weekly until recovery (ie, resolution of the deformity and lameness). RESULTS: All dogs responded to conservative management, with all dogs regaining full extension of the antebrachiocarpal joint and ambulating normally at the time of the final visit. Mean ± SD time from initial diagnosis to recovery (ie, resolution of the deformity and lameness) was 2.9 ± 2.2 weeks (median, 2 weeks; range, 1 to 9 weeks). For dogs with grade 1 or 2 severity, mean time to recovery did not differ significantly between treatment groups. For dogs with grade 3 severity, however, mean time to recovery was significantly shorter for dogs treated with rest and bandaging than for dogs treated with rest alone. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results suggested that conservative management (rest alone or rest and bandaging) was a successful treatment option for puppies with carpal flexural contracture deformity and that bandaging resulted in a shorter time to recovery for dogs that were severely affected.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34936569/