Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Surgery to remove bone fragments in declawed cats
By Martell-Moran, Nicole K·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2024·Feline Medical Center, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Surgical excision of P3 fragments in 86 declawed cats: case series (2013-2023).
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 86 declawed cats, many from shelters, were brought in for issues like lameness, house-soiling, and biting behavior. X-rays showed they had fragments of a bone in their toes, which were causing pain and other problems. The cats underwent surgery to remove these bone fragments and fix their toes, which helped improve their symptoms. After surgery, most cats showed significant improvement in their behavior and mobility, with only a few experiencing mild lameness afterward. Overall, the surgery was successful, and the cats felt better post-treatment.
People also search for: declawed cat lameness · cat house-soiling behavior · declaw surgery recovery · cat biting behavior after declaw · cat toe surgery outcome
Abstract
CASE SERIES SUMMARY: This case series describes the clinical findings and surgical intervention of 86 declawed cats; 52 from a shelter or rescue and 34 owned cats. Historical reports from owners and shelter staff included house-soiling, biting behavior, repelling behavior, barbering, lameness, chronic digit infection and nail regrowth. All the cats had fragments of the third phalanx (P3) of varying sizes diagnosed on radiographs. Pathology visible on examination included digital subcutaneous swelling, ecchymosis, malaligned digital pads, ulcerations, exudate, tendon contracture, nail regrowth and callusing. Surgery was pursued in these cases to remove the P3 fragments, relieve tendon contracture and reposition the digital pads with an anchoring suture. Gross findings intraoperatively included fragmented growth of cornified and non-cornified nail tissue, osteophytes on the surface of the second phalanx, deep digital flexor tendon calcification, and both bacterial and sterile exudate. The most common complication 14 days postoperatively was mild (14%) to moderate (1%) lameness. All historical parameters recorded improved in both populations of cats (house-soiling, biting behavior, repelling behavior, barbering, lameness, tendon contracture and chronic digit infection). Postoperatively, 1/47 cats exhibited continued malalignment of two digital pads and there were no reports of long-term postoperative lameness. RELEVANCE AND NOVEL INFORMATION: Two methods of declawing cats are detailed in the veterinary literature, including partial amputation of P3 and disarticulation of the entire P3 bone. The novel information in this report includes historical and clinical signs of declawed cats with P3 fragments, intraoperative gross pathology, surgical intervention and the postoperative follow-up results.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38660961/