Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Partial limb amputation with prosthetic limb in dogs outcomes
By Wendland, Theresa M et al.·Published in Veterinary medicine and science·2023·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Prospective evaluation of canine partial limb amputation with socket prostheses.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs needing limb amputation due to serious issues were given a chance to keep their legs by undergoing partial limb amputation and receiving a custom socket prosthesis. Most of the dogs were able to walk on all fours again, with their prostheses supporting a good amount of their body weight. However, some dogs faced challenges like skin sores and issues with the prosthesis fitting properly. Despite these complications, most owners were happy with the results and the option to avoid full amputation.
People also search for: dog limb amputation recovery · dog prosthesis fitting issues · partial limb amputation for dogs · dog walking with prosthetic leg · dog limb surgery complications
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Canine prostheses have been commercially available for many years but are still in early stages of research, development, and clinical application. OBJECTIVE: To prospectively investigate mid-term clinical outcomes of partial limb amputation with a socket prosthesis (PLASP) in canine patients via a descriptive prospective clinical case series and to describe a clinical protocol for PLASP. METHODS: Client-owned dogs (n = 12) with distal limb pathology for which total limb amputation was recommended were enrolled. Partial limb amputation was performed and a socket prosthesis was moulded and fitted to the limb. Complications, clinical follow-up, and objective gait analysis (OGA) were recorded for at least 6 months. An online survey was completed by owners after study completion. RESULTS: Ten dogs with thoracic limb pathology and two with pelvic limb pathology were included. The most common site of amputation was mid-radius (n = 5). Eleven of 12 dogs demonstrated quadrupedal gait on OGA with mean per cent body weight distribution (%BWD) of 26% on thoracic limb prostheses and a %BWD of 16% for the one pelvic limb prosthesis that OGA data were available for. Complications included prosthesis suspension difficulties (n = 5), pressure sores (4), bursitis (4), postoperative infection (3), prosthesis aversion (2), dermatitis (1), and owner noncompliance (1). Two owners elected to discontinue prosthesis use. CONCLUSIONS: PLASP allowed restoration of quadrupedal gait patterns in most patients. Owners reported overall positive satisfaction, though a high complication rate was observed. PLASP should be considered in select cases as an alternative to total limb amputation for dogs with distal limb pathology.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37287388/