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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Outcomes for overweight dogs with cruciate ligament tear surgery

By Wucherer, Katja L et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2013·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Short-term and long-term outcomes for overweight dogs with cranial cruciate ligament rupture treated surgically or nonsurgically.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of overweight dogs with a torn knee ligament (cranial cruciate ligament rupture) were treated either with surgery or a combination of physical therapy, weight loss, and pain medication. Both groups showed improvement, but the dogs that had surgery experienced better results, especially in how well they could use their affected leg. After a year, about 75% of the dogs that had surgery had a successful outcome, compared to around 64% of those treated without surgery. This suggests that while surgery may offer better results, many dogs can still do well with nonsurgical treatments.

People also search for: overweight dog knee injury treatment · cranial cruciate ligament rupture surgery · dog physical therapy for knee problems

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine short- and long-term rates of successful outcomes of surgical and nonsurgical treatments for overweight dogs with cranial cruciate ligament rupture (CCLR). DESIGN: Prospective, randomized, clinical trial. Animals-40 client-owned overweight dogs with unilateral CCLR. PROCEDURES: Dogs were randomly assigned to nonsurgical (physical therapy, weight loss, and NSAID administration) or surgical (tibial plateau leveling osteotomy) treatment groups; dogs in both groups received the same nonsurgical treatments. Dogs were evaluated immediately before and 6, 12, 24, and 52 weeks after initiation of treatments via owner questionnaires, gait analysis, and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry. A successful outcome was defined as an affected limb net ground reaction force > 85% of the value for healthy dogs and a ≥ 10% improvement in values of questionnaire variables. RESULTS: Owner questionnaire responses indicated dogs in both groups improved during the study, but dogs in the surgical treatment group seemed to have greater improvement. Body fat percentages for dogs in both treatment groups significantly decreased during the study. Surgical treatment group dogs had significantly higher peak vertical force for affected limbs versus nonsurgical treatment group dogs at the 24- and 52-week evaluation times. Surgical treatment group dogs had a higher probability of a successful outcome (67.7%, 92.6%, and 75.0% for 12-, 24-, and 52-week evaluations, respectively) versus nonsurgical treatment group dogs (47.1%, 33.3%, and 63.6% for 12-, 24-, and 52-week evaluations, respectively). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Overweight dogs with CCLR treated via surgical and nonsurgical methods had better outcomes than dogs treated via nonsurgical methods alone. However, almost two-thirds of the dogs in the nonsurgical treatment group had a successful outcome at the 52-week evaluation time.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23634680/