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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Photobiomodulation and rehab effects on dog recovery after spinal

By Bennaim, Michael et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2017·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Preliminary evaluation of the effects of photobiomodulation therapy and physical rehabilitation on early postoperative recovery of dogs undergoing hemilaminectomy for treatment of thoracolumbar intervertebral disk disease.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 32 dogs that had surgery for intervertebral disk disease were monitored to see how well they recovered after receiving different types of postoperative care. Some dogs received photobiomodulation therapy (a light-based treatment), while others had physical rehabilitation or no special treatment at all. After 10 days, there was no significant difference in how quickly the dogs were able to support their weight or walk unassisted, regardless of the treatment they received. The study suggests that more research is needed to understand the best ways to help dogs recover after this type of surgery.

People also search for: dog back surgery recovery · intervertebral disk disease treatment · photobiomodulation therapy for dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effects of postoperative photobiomodulation therapy and physical rehabilitation on early recovery variables for dogs after hemilaminectomy for treatment of intervertebral disk disease. ANIMALS 32 nonambulatory client-owned dogs. PROCEDURES Dogs received standard postoperative care with photobiomodulation therapy (n = 11), physical rehabilitation with sham photobiomodulation treatment (11), or sham photobiomodulation treatment only (10) after surgery. Neurologic status at admission, diagnostic and surgical variables, duration of postoperative IV analgesic administration, and recovery grades (over 10 days after surgery) were assessed. Time to reach recovery grades B (able to support weight with some help), C (initial limb movements present), and D (ambulatory [≥ 3 steps unassisted]) was compared among groups. Factors associated with ability to ambulate on day 10 or at last follow-up were assessed. RESULTS Time to reach recovery grades B, C, and D and duration of postoperative IV opioid administration did not differ among groups. Neurologic score at admission and surgeon experience were negatively associated with the dogs' ability to ambulate on day 10. The number of disk herniations identified by diagnostic imaging before surgery was negatively associated with ambulatory status at last follow-up. No other significant associations and no adverse treatment-related events were identified. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE This study found no difference in recovery-related variables among dogs that received photobiomodulation therapy, physical rehabilitation with sham photobiomodulation treatment, or sham photobiomodulation treatment only. Larger studies are needed to better evaluate effects of these postoperative treatments on dogs treated surgically for intervertebral disk disease.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28140641/