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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Elbow X-ray and scope results in 263 dogs with coronoid disease

By Fitzpatrick, Noel et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2009·Fitzpatrick Referrals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Radiographic and arthroscopic findings in the elbow joints of 263 dogs with medial coronoid disease.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 263 dogs, mostly Labrador Retrievers around 2.5 years old, were brought in for limping due to a condition called medial coronoid disease (MCD) affecting their elbow joints. Many showed signs of joint changes on X-rays, but only a few elbows appeared normal. During surgery, common findings included cracks and fragments in the affected area. The study found that the severity of joint changes seen on X-rays didn't always match how long the dogs had been limping or the extent of damage seen during surgery. Treatment options may vary, but addressing the underlying joint issues is crucial for recovery.

People also search for: dog limping elbow pain · Labrador Retriever elbow disease · medial coronoid disease treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To report clinical, radiographic, and arthroscopic findings in dogs with thoracic limb lameness attributed solely to disease of the medial aspect of the coronoid process (MCP). STUDY DESIGN: Case series. ANIMALS: Dogs (n=263) with MCP disease (MCD; 437 elbows). METHODS: Clinical records (January 2000-July 2006) and radiographs were reviewed and pertinent data recorded. Radiographic interpretation included measures of periarticular osteophytosis, gross assessment of MCP integrity, and measurement of ulnar subtrochlear sclerosis (STS). Statistical analysis was performed to evaluate associations between data; confidence interval was set at 95%. RESULTS: Labrador Retrievers were 50.2% of all dogs with MCD. Mean age at diagnosis was 32 months and duration of lameness was 14.5 weeks. Thirteen elbows (3%) were considered radiographically normal. Osteophytosis was identified on the anconeal process (70.2%), radial head (37.3%), and lateral epicondyle (56.5%), and STS was identified in 86.7% of elbows. Median osteophytosis score was 1; mean absolute osteophytosis score was 1.7. Arthroscopic findings included: fissuring (18.3%) and fragmentation (64.1%) of the MCP and kissing lesions (49.0%) of elbows. Median-modified Outerbridge score of the MCP was 2 and the humeral condyle, 0. Weak or moderate correlations were found between osteophytosis and modified Outerbridge scores and weak correlation between modified Outerbridge scores of the MCP and medial humeral condyle. CONCLUSIONS: Wide ranges in clinical, radiographic, and arthroscopic findings are recognized in dogs with MCD but correlations between such factors are generally weak. Radiographic and arthroscopic findings do not correlate with owner-reported duration of lameness. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Radiographic measures of osteophytosis are poor predictors of severity of arthroscopic pathology for MCD.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19236680/