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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Ultrasound method to check dog shoulder ligament and muscle injuries

By Porter, Ian et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2025·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Ultrasonographic approach to visualize the medial shoulder compartment and diagnose medial glenohumeral ligament and subscapularis lesions in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A dog with shoulder pain was examined using a new ultrasound technique to check for injuries to the shoulder ligaments and tendons. This method allowed veterinarians to see both normal and damaged structures in the shoulder without needing more invasive procedures like MRI or surgery. The ultrasound results matched well with MRI findings, making it a reliable option for diagnosing issues like medial glenohumeral ligament and subscapularis injuries. This approach is less invasive and can help vets identify problems that cause lameness in dogs more easily.

People also search for: dog shoulder pain ultrasound · dog lameness diagnosis · subscapularis injury treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To provide a video tutorial on the diagnostic ultrasound approach to the medial compartment of the canine shoulder and provide comparisons of normal and pathological images with corresponding MRI. ANIMALS: Dogs undergoing diagnostic ultrasound of the medial shoulder. METHODS: The medial shoulder was positioned in flexion with external rotation to allow transducer access, clipped, and scrubbed with dilute chlorhexidine. A 2- to 14-MHz linear array probe with a footprint of 50 mm (V8 ultrasound system; Samsung) was used to visualize the medial glenohumeral ligament (MGL), subscapularis, and coracobrachialis with coupling gel, confirmed by cadaveric ultrasound-guided dye injection and dissection. Ultrasound and corresponding MRI were then used to contrast normal anatomy to a live sedated dog with clinical subscapularis tendinopathy and MGL desmopathy. Proton density-weighted MRI sequences (1.5T Vantage Orian; Canon) using a flex coil were able to identify all 3 structures and corresponded to ultrasound findings for normal and pathological anatomy. RESULTS: Diagnostic ultrasound identified normal and abnormal structures of the medial shoulder (coracobrachialis, subscapularis, and MGL). All imaging correlated well to MRI. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Medial compartment disease of the shoulder is a well-described cause of canine lameness, but diagnosis has traditionally relied on MRI or arthroscopy. Prior ultrasound approaches did not distinguish MGL components, failed to consistently identify normal or surgically transected ligaments, and have not been studied in vivo. Our approach is different and can play an important role in diagnosing medial compartment lesions, as it possesses greater anatomical visualization than arthroscopy and is noninvasive, accomplished with sedation, and relatively accessible and affordable.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39476493/