Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
X-ray signs of medial humeral epicondyle changes in 200 dog elbows
By de Bakker, E et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative orthopaedics and traumatology : V.C.O.T·2012·Department of Veterinary Medical imaging and Small Animal Orthopaedics·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Radiographic findings of the medial humeral epicondyle in 200 canine elbow joints.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with elbow lameness underwent imaging tests to check for issues in their elbow joints. Out of 200 elbows examined, 80 showed changes in a specific area called the medial humeral epicondyle. In 12 cases, these changes were the only problem found, leading to a diagnosis of primary flexor enthesopathy, which can cause lameness. The other 68 elbows had additional issues, often linked to high levels of osteoarthritis. This suggests that changes in the medial humeral epicondyle can be a significant cause of lameness rather than just a sign of arthritis.
People also search for: dog elbow lameness · medial humeral epicondyle changes in dogs · primary flexor enthesopathy treatment
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To determine the frequency and radiographic aspect of medial humeral epicondylar lesions as a primary or concomitant finding and to evaluate the association with osteoarthritis. METHODS: Medical records of dogs diagnosed with elbow lameness were reviewed. Inclusion criteria for this study were a complete clinical examination, a complete set of digital radiographs and a final diagnosis made by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging and arthroscopy. Changes of the medial humeral epicondyle were recorded and correlated with the radiographic osteoarthritis and final diagnosis. RESULTS: Eighty of the 200 elbows showed changes of the medial humeral epicondyle. In 12 of these 80 elbows, changes of the medial epicondyle were the only findings within the joint, and these elbows were diagnosed with primary flexor enthesopathy. In the remaining 68 elbows, other concomitant elbow pathologies were found. In those cases of concomitant epicondylar changes, high grades of osteoarthritis were recorded, while most elbows with primary flexor enthesopathy showed a low grade of osteoarthritis. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Changes of the medial humeral epicondyle are often considered clinically unimportant and are regarded as an expression of osteoarthritis. This study showed the relatively frequent presence of epicondylar changes of which the majority were considered concomitant to a primary elbow problem. If changes of the medial humeral epicondyle are the only pathologic finding (primary flexor enthesopathy) they should be considered as the cause of lameness and not as a sign of osteoarthritis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22580985/