Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with broken front leg bone from bone death treated with surgery
By Sukumaran, Kaarthegeswaran et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2020·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Repair of a pathological radial fracture secondary to radioulnar ischemic necrosis in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 3-year-old male Pomeranian was brought in because he couldn't put weight on his right front leg for a day. The vet found a fracture in the radius bone, which was linked to a condition called radioulnar ischemic necrosis (RUIN), where part of the bone dies due to lack of blood flow. During surgery, the vet removed damaged tissue and stabilized the fracture with a plate and screw. After 12 days, the dog was walking normally, and by 15 weeks, follow-up tests showed that the fracture had healed completely and the bone condition had resolved.
People also search for: dog forelimb lameness · Pomeranian leg fracture treatment · radioulnar ischemic necrosis in dogs
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION: A 3-year-old 2.5-kg (5.5-lb) sexually intact male Pomeranian was presented with a 1-day history of non-weight-bearing lameness of the right forelimb. CLINICAL FINDINGS: Signs of pain were localized to the proximal portion of the right antebrachium. Radiography revealed a minimally displaced fracture of the proximal portion of the radius that had propagated from a well-demarcated, ovoid, osteolytic lesion within the cortex of the caudolateral aspect of the radius. Computed tomographic findings supported the radiographic findings and did not reveal lesions in other evaluated body sites. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: At surgery, the lateral aspect of the radial cortex appeared expanded, and tenacious fibrous tissue filled the gap between the fracture fragments. Fibrous tissue was resected and submitted for histologic examination, and the fracture was reduced and stabilized with a bone plate and a positional screw. Histologic examination revealed the presence of viable bone, fibrous tissue, and areas of coagulative necrosis. Imaging and histologic findings were consistent with radioulnar ischemic necrosis (RUIN). The patient ambulated normally at reexamination 12 days after surgery. At reexamination 15 weeks after surgery, the patient continued to ambulate normally, and radiography and CT indicated healing of the fracture and resolution of the RUIN lesion. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: RUIN should be considered as a differential diagnosis for a dog with forelimb lameness and radiographic focal osteolysis between the proximal and middle thirds of the diaphysis of the radius or ulna. Prognosis for dogs with RUIN may be good with surgical intervention.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32715885/