Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog puppy cleft palate repaired with decellularized skin graft
By Dall'Olio, Adriano et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary dentistry·2024·Department of Surgery, Brazil·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Utilization of a Decellularized Skin Scaffold for Repair of a Cleft Palate in a Dog: A Case Report.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 3-month-old female Pug was brought in for a severe cleft palate, a condition that can be life-threatening if not treated. The veterinarians used a new surgical technique involving a decellularized skin graft, which is a type of biological scaffold, to repair the cleft. After the surgery, the graft successfully integrated with the dog's tissue, leading to complete closure of the cleft without any complications like infection or rejection. This innovative approach showed promising results for treating cleft palates in dogs.
People also search for: dog cleft palate treatment · Pug cleft palate surgery · decellularized skin graft for dogs
Abstract
Cleft palates are oral deformities that mostly affect puppies. They are frequently extensive and characterized by bone and palatal mucosa malformation. This deformity is a serious condition that may result in the death of the dog, therefore surgical treatment is recommended. Tissue bioengineering has emerged as a valuable option to treat cleft palates by applying acellular biological scaffolds as grafts. This case report proposed a new approach for surgical correction of canine cleft palate through a grafting technique using a decellularized scaffold. A decellularized portion of skin was implanted to correct a large cleft palate in a 3-month-old female Pug dog. The skin fragment was obtained from a dog cadaver and a decellularization protocol was performed. Under general anesthesia, a bilateral mucoperiosteal separation of the entire length of cleft margins was performed, and the scaffold was then positioned between the tissue and the bone palate. The interaction of the grafted scaffold with the oral mucosa and palatine layers resulted in total cleft closure, without postsurgical rejection or infection, indicating the applicability of this technique in dog's cleft palate correction. This is the first reported case demonstrating this new technique, which resulted in full cleft closure and healing.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37644824/