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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Surgery with external fixator for tibial tuberosity fractures

By Verpaalen, Valentine D & Lewis, Daniel D·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2021·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Use of a hybrid external skeletal fixator construct for managing tibial tuberosity avulsion fractures in three dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Three young dogs, aged 4 to 5 months, were brought in for sudden limping and not putting weight on one back leg after falling during play. They all had swelling around the knee and pain when the leg was touched, and X-rays confirmed they had tibial tuberosity avulsion fractures, where a piece of bone is pulled away. Each dog underwent surgery to fix the fracture using a special external device to stabilize the bone. After two weeks, the device was removed, and all dogs showed good recovery, with two completely free of limping and one having only mild occasional limping.

People also search for: dog limping after fall · tibial tuberosity fracture treatment · puppy knee injury recovery

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION: 3 juvenile (4 to 5 months of age) medium- to large-breed or crossbred dogs were evaluated for sudden unilateral non-weight-bearing lameness in a pelvic limb after a fall during strenuous activity. CLINICAL FINDINGS: All dogs had non-weight-bearing lameness (n = 2) or bore minimal weight (1) on the affected pelvic limb, had soft tissue swelling over the cranial aspect of the stifle joint in the affected limb, seemed to resist manipulation of the affected joint, and had tibial tuberosity avulsion fracture confirmed with radiography. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: Each dog underwent surgical fracture reduction and stabilization with a hybrid circular-linear external skeletal fixator construct with interfragmentary Kirschner wires used to stabilize the avulsed tibial tuberosity. Successful fracture reduction and stabilization were achieved, and only minor postoperative complications occurred. Construct removal 2 weeks postoperatively resulted in no displacement of the tibial tuberosity in 2 dogs and only minor proximal displacement in the remaining dog, allowed for continued unencumbered growth through the apophysis and proximal tibial epiphysis in all dogs, and did not result in tibial conformational anomalies. Clinical outcome was considered excellent in 2 dogs with complete resolution of lameness and good in 1 dog with subsequent occasional mild lameness. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Our findings suggested that the described hybrid external skeletal fixator construct could be used as a minimally invasive strategy to successfully manage tibial tuberosity avulsion fractures in dogs and may be advantageous in very young medium- to large-breed dogs in which premature closure of the tibial tuberosity apophysis could result in distal translocation of the tibial tuberosity and deformity of the tibial plateau.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33944593/