Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Short-term wound problems after limb amputation in dogs and cats
By Raske, M et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2015·The Animal Medical Center, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Short-term wound complications and predictive variables for complication after limb amputation in dogs and cats.
Plain-English summary
A group of 39 dogs and 28 cats underwent limb amputation, and some experienced short-term wound complications afterward. About 21% had issues like infections or inflammation, with dogs being more affected than cats. Most complications were minor and resolved with treatment, while only one major complication occurred immediately after surgery. The study found that older pets were more likely to develop these complications. Overall, the majority of pets recovered well after their surgeries.
People also search for: dog limb amputation recovery · cat wound infection after surgery · complications after dog amputation
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To identify short-term wound complications and associated predictive factors following amputation in dogs and cats. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Retrospective review of case records of dogs and cats undergoing thoracic or pelvic limb amputation. Preoperative data on signalment, body weight, limb amputated, reason for amputation and laboratory parameters were collected. Details regarding surgical procedures and use of anaesthesia such as total surgical and anaesthesia times, incidences of intraoperative hypotension or hypothermia, method of muscle excision and type of skin closure utilized were recorded. Postoperative data on duration of hospital stay, use of postoperative antibiotics, use of a wound soaker catheter, wound complications noted both during hospitalization and at recheck and treatments if applicable were collected. RESULTS: In total, 67 records were identified including 39 dogs and 28 cats. Wound infection/inflammation complications occurred in 20.9% of cases and wound infection complications in 9%; 12.8% in dogs and 3.6% in cats. One (1.5%) complication was classified as major, which occurred immediately postoperatively. Nine (13.4%) minor complications occurred immediately after surgery and four (6.0%) were identified at recheck. Age was the only significant predictor of postoperative infection/inflammation following pelvic or thoracic limb amputation. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Short-term wound complications following pelvic or thoracic limb amputation in cats and dogs were typically minor and resolved after treatment.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25703832/