Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Traumatic growth plate fractures in cats and their treatment
By Rubinos, Carlos & Meeson, Richard L·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2022·Department of Clinical Science and Services, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Traumatic physeal fractures in cats: a review of 36 cases (2010-2020).
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A 2-year-old domestic shorthair cat was brought in for a broken leg after a fall, which was diagnosed as a physeal fracture (a type of growth plate fracture). The vet treated the fracture using crossed Kirschner wires for stabilization. Most cats in a similar situation had good outcomes, with 28 out of 34 fractures healing well. While some cats experienced minor complications, the majority did not need further surgery to remove the implants used for fixation.
People also search for: cat broken leg treatment · physeal fracture in cats · cat leg injury recovery
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to describe the demography, aetiology, location and classification of physeal fractures in cats, and to describe their management and outcomes. METHODS: Clinical records and radiographs of cats referred for management of physeal fractures were retrospectively reviewed. Fractures of the proximal femoral physis were excluded. Descriptive statistics were used to describe signalment, cause of injury, presence of concurrent injuries, fracture description, treatment modality, complications, follow-up, physeal closure, implant removal and outcome. RESULTS: Thirty-four cats with 36 fractures were included, of which 17 affected the distal femur, 11 the distal tibia and fibula, five the distal radius and ulna, two the proximal tibia and one the distal humerus. Salter-Harris classification was type I in 14, type II in 16, type III in two and type IV in four fractures. Thirty-four fractures were treated with primary fixation, and the most common method was crossed Kirschner wires (24/34 fractures). Complications were observed in 14 fractures, of which 12 were minor. At radiographic follow-up, physeal closure was reported in 23 fractures, of which 15 were considered premature. Implant removal was performed in three fractures. Outcome was good in 28, fair in four and poor in two fractures. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Fracture of the distal femoral physis was the most common physeal fracture seen. Cats presenting with physeal fractures may be skeletally immature or mature with delayed physeal closure. The rate of physeal closure after fracture repair was relatively high but without apparent impact. The frequency of implant removal was very low, indicating that despite having a physeal fracture repair, most cats did not require a second procedure to remove implants. Overall, internal fixation provided a good outcome in most fractures.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33847538/