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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Muscle activity in small dogs after spinal surgery T3-L3

By Schwartz, John A et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2024·Department of Comparative, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Surface electromyography of the vastus lateralis and gluteus medius muscles in post-operative T3-L3 hemilaminectomy dogs: a prospective controlled observational study.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of small-breed dogs that had spinal surgery for a slipped disk were tested to see how their muscles were working as they walked. The dogs had undergone a hemilaminectomy, a procedure to relieve pressure on the spinal cord, about a month prior. Researchers found that these dogs showed greater muscle activation in their hind legs compared to normal dogs, but the leg that had surgery was not as active as the other leg. This suggests that the surgery affects muscle function, and using surface electromyography (sEMG) can help assess recovery in dogs after such procedures.

People also search for: dog spinal surgery recovery · hemilaminectomy muscle activation · small breed dog walking problems

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to determine if surface electromyography (sEMG) demonstrates differences in muscle activation between normal and dogs recovering from spinal cord injury due to intervertebral disk extrusion. ANIMALS: Two groups of client-owned small-breed chondrodysplastic-type dogs were tested. Group 1 consisted of seven ambulatory paraparetic dogs that had undergone a hemilaminectomy procedure in the T3-L3 region for intervertebral disk extrusion 1 month prior. Group 2 was made up of seven normal dogs that had no history of intervertebral disk disease or spinal surgery. PROCEDURES: Each subject walked 10 feet on a nonslip surface for at least five gait cycles for the sEMG to capture muscle activation of the vastus lateralis and gluteus medius, bilaterally. Muscle activation was quantified as the total myoelectric output area under the curve, averaged across all gait cycles. RESULTS: Muscle activation was significantly greater in the post-operative hemilaminectomy group ( = 0.012). There was a significant difference in muscle activation between each hindlimb in the post-operative hemilaminectomy group, but not in the normal group. The muscle activation was significantly lower on the side that underwent surgery compared to the opposite limb ( = 0.0034). CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Post-operative hemilaminectomy dogs have greater hindlimb muscle activation compared to normal dogs, which likely represents a lack of descending inhibition secondary to upper motor neuron syndrome. The side of surgery is correlated with decreased muscle activation. Surface EMG can be used to evaluate muscle activity in dogs recovering from spinal decompression surgery.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39149150/