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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Surgical correction of ear curling caused by scar tissue formation in a horse.

Journal:
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
Year:
2005
Authors:
Massoni, Sabrina et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Surgery and Anaesthesia of Domestic Animals
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

An 18-month-old Belgian Warmblood mare had an injury on the outer part of her left ear, which healed in a way that caused the tip of the ear to curl backward. To fix this, veterinarians used a special surgical technique that involved creating a flap of healthy tissue and making cuts in the cartilage of the ear. They also placed a skin graft to help the wound heal faster and used a special material to keep the ear in the right shape after surgery. Thirty days later, the graft had healed well, and the ear looked normal again. This treatment worked successfully to correct the ear deformity caused by scar tissue.

Abstract

An 18-month-old Belgian Warmblood mare was evaluated because it had injured the outer convex aspect of the left auricle. Second intention healing of the wound area caused tissue contracture, which resulted in the tip of the ear curling backward. By use of a technique involving undermining of the skin and a flap of granulation tissue on the medial aspect of the wound area and multiple incisions of the auricular cartilage, the curling was relieved and the ear regained a more normal shape. A skin graft was applied to cover the existing wound defect in an attempt to accelerate wound healing; thermoplastic material was contoured to fit the inner concave surface of the ear for immobilization and fixation of the ear in its final shape after surgery. Thirty days after surgery, the graft had healed completely and the ear had a normal conformation. The successful outcome of this treatment suggests that correction of an ear deformity secondary to scar tissue formation by use of an adapted surgical technique and appropriate materials can be achieved with good cosmetic results in horses.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16220675/