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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Patellar luxation in 70 large breed dogs and their treatment outcomes

By Gibbons, S E et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2006·Willows Referral Service·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Patellar luxation in 70 large breed dogs.

Species:
dog
Dog limpingMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A 2-year-old Labrador retriever was brought in for limping due to a condition called patellar luxation, where the kneecap slips out of place. The dog underwent surgery, which involved several techniques to stabilize the knee, and the outcome was excellent for 94% of the treated limbs. Although some complications were noted, most dogs showed significant improvement after surgery. For those managed without surgery, 86% also had good outcomes.

People also search for: dog limping knee problem · Labrador patellar luxation treatment · dog knee surgery recovery

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To report the signalment, history, clinical features, and outcome in dogs weighing greater than 15 kg, treated surgically and non-surgically for patellar luxation. Risk factors for the development of patellar luxation, postoperative complications, and outcome were evaluated. METHODS: Details regarding signalment, bodyweight, breed, aetiology, unilateral or bilateral luxation, duration of lameness, grade of luxation, direction of luxation, grade of lameness at presentation, concomitant cranial cruciate ligament rupture, method of treatment, surgical technique, surgeon, and complications were obtained from the medical records. Outcome was graded as excellent, good, fair, or poor, according to the degree of lameness. RESULTS: Seventy dogs (45 males and 25 females) were included. Thirty-five had bilateral luxations (105 limbs). Mean age was two years, and mean weight was 30 kg. The relative risk for Labrador retrievers was 3.3 (P<0.001). All luxations were developmental. Luxations were medial in 102 stifles and lateral in three. Fourteen stifles had concomitant cranial cruciate ligament rupture. As the grade of patellar luxation increased, so did the grade of lameness (P<0.001). Surgery was performed in 70 stifles, and outcome was excellent/good in 94 per cent and fair/poor in 6 per cent of stifles. Complications occurred in 29 per cent of stifles, and increasing bodyweight was found to be a risk factor (P=0.03). Thirty-five stifles were managed non-surgically, and outcome was excellent/good in 86 per cent and fair/poor in 14 per cent of stifles. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: In view of the potential risk of postoperative complications, all surgically treated cases of patellar luxation in large breed dogs should be managed with a femoral trochleoplasty, a tibial tuberosity transposition (stabilised with K-wires and a tension band wire), and soft tissue releasing and tightening procedures.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16417603/