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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Surgery fixes multiple broken foot bones in young chinchilla

By Desprez, Isabelle et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2016·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Surgical management of multiple metatarsal fractures in a chinchilla (Chinchilla lanigera).

Species:
rodent
Movement & joints

Plain-English summary

A 3-month-old female chinchilla was brought in for sudden lameness in her right hind leg and had a swollen foot with an open wound. X-rays showed that she had multiple fractures in her metatarsal bones. The veterinarian performed surgery to repair the fractures using pins and an external fixator, and the chinchilla was able to bear weight on her leg just nine days later, with only mild lameness. After 35 days, the surgical hardware was removed, and by 56 days post-surgery, she was fully weight-bearing and healing well.

People also search for: chinchilla leg injury treatment · chinchilla metatarsal fracture care · chinchilla surgery recovery time

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION A 3-month-old sexually intact female chinchilla (Chinchilla lanigera) was examined for sudden onset of non-weight-bearing lameness of the right hind limb. CLINICAL FINDINGS On physical examination, the right pes was swollen. An open wound on the medial aspect of the metatarsal region exposed the second metatarsal bone, and the pes was displaced laterally. Radiographs of the right pes revealed oblique displaced fractures of the 4 metatarsal bones. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME Surgical treatment was elected, and enrofloxacin was administered prior to surgery. The protruding fragment of the second metatarsal bone was excised, and the third and fourth metatarsal bones were repaired with intramedullary pins and external skeletal fixation. The chinchilla was bearing weight on the affected limb 9 days after surgery with only mild lameness. The implants were removed 35 days after surgery when radiographs showed bony union of the third and fourth metatarsal bones and continued reduction of the fractures of the second and fifth metatarsal bones. Fifty-six days after surgery, the chinchilla was bearing full weight on the limb, and radiographs showed bony union of the third, fourth, and fifth metatarsal bones. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Findings suggested that intramedullary pinning combined with an epoxy resin external fixator may be an effective technique for metatarsal fracture repair in chinchillas. This method allowed physiologic positioning of the limb and functional hind limb use during fracture healing. Prospective studies of fracture healing in exotic small mammals are indicated.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27654167/