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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Ultrasound protocol helps find foreign bodies in dog lower legs

By Schoenfeld, Ebony et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2023·School of Agricultural, Australia·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: The development of a systematic ultrasound protocol facilitates the visualization of foreign bodies within the canine distal limb.

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A dog with a suspected foreign body in its leg was examined using a new ultrasound method designed to find plant material stuck in the soft tissues. The ultrasound protocol helped veterinarians identify and successfully remove the foreign bodies in seven out of eight cases. This method focused on specific areas of the leg where these foreign objects are likely to be found, improving the chances of detection compared to traditional techniques. Overall, the new ultrasound approach showed promise for better diagnosing and treating dogs with foreign bodies in their limbs.

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Abstract

Ultrasonography is an excellent investigative tool that can assist with the diagnosis of soft tissue conditions. In human medicine, ultrasonography is a fundamental diagnostic tool for the investigation of suspected vegetal foreign bodies (VFB), with protocol-based ultrasonography providing increased accuracy compared to lesion-focused examinations. Protocol-based ultrasonography is an emerging tool within the veterinary field, however, compared to human medicine is not routinely employed. The objective of this study was to develop a systematic ultrasound protocol to examine the distal limb for the visualization of vegetal foreign bodies (SUEDVEG). A 12 MHz linear and an 18 MHz high-frequency small-footprint linear array transducer was used on cadaver forelimbs ( = 6) and hindlimbs ( = 6) with images obtained from three common foreign body locations within the distal limb; 1; the interdigital webbing, 2; the palmar/plantar aspect of the phalanges and metacarpus and 3; the dorsal region of the phalanges and metacarpus. From these images, a 13-step systematic musculoskeletal protocol was developed and utilized on eight clinical cases or 10 limbs that had signs typical of distal limb VFB to preliminarily validate the proposed method. Vegetal foreign bodies were successfully identified and retrieved in seven ( = 8) clinical cases with method steps 9 and 11 (orthogonal views) identifying the majority of VFBs. The described ultrasound method appears highly useful for visualizing soft tissue locations of the canine distal limb known for tracking foreign bodies. Further studies are required to validate the described systematic examination method as the preferred clinical protocol over currently used lesion-focused exploration techniques.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38192719/