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Papers and published works Progression
of osteoarthritis following TPLO surgery:
a prospective radiographic study of 40 dogs
Rayward RM, Thomson
DG, Davies JV, Innes JF, Whitelock
RG
J Small Anim Pract 2004; 45:92-7
The aim of this prospective study was to assess the progression of osteoarthritis following tibial
plateau levelling osteotomy (TPLO) surgery. Osteoarthritis was monitored radiographically by means of an osteophyte scale
on entry to the study, and at six weeks and six months following surgical intervention. Forty dogs were recruited to the
study. At each visit, animals were assessed clinically, radiographically, by force platform analysis and by synovial fluid
sampling. The radiographic data is the subject of this report. A significant increase in mean osteophyte score was noted
between the entry and six-month examination time point. This increase in the mean osteophyte score was due to the increased
score recorded in 16 dogs. However, in the majority of dogs, there was no progression of osteophytosis during the course
of this study.
Progression
of osteoarthritis following TPLO surgery
Störk CK, Gibson NR, Owen
MR, Li A, Schwarz T, Bennett D, Carmichael S (2001). Radiographic features of a lateral
extracapsular wire suture in the
canine cranial cruciate deficient stifle.
J Small Anim Pract:42, 487-490.
Radiographs of 74 dogs (84 stifles) presented with a cranial cruciate ligament rupture and surgically
treated using a lateral extracapsular wire (LEW) were reviewed. A strand of orthopaedic wire was surgically placed caudally
around the lateral fabella and through a predrilled hole in the tibial crest. At six week follow-up, the LEW was broken
at least once in 26 of 33 stifles, predominantly in the area of the lateral fabella. In five stifles, the LEW had slipped
off the fabella and was displaced distally along the gastrocnemius muscle. Six months after surgery, the LEW was often broken
at several sites. LEW migration was rare. Osteolysis and sclerosis at the site of LEW penetration through the tibial crest
occurred in about two-thirds of the stifles examined.
Schwarz T, Crawford PE, Owen MR, Störk CK, Thompson H (2001). Fatal pulmonary
fat embolism during humeral fracture repair in a cat.
J Small Anim Pract:42, 195-198.
An 11-month-old cat was referred following a road traffic accident with non-weightbearing forelimb
lameness and tachypnoea. A diaphragmatic rupture was repaired two days after trauma. Six days post trauma, a further operation
was performed to repair the fractured humerus. As an intramedullary pin was advanced into the bone to achieve stabilisation,
acute respiratory arrest occurred. Manual extrathoracic cardiopulmonary resuscitation was immediately instigated, but the
cat did not recover. Postmortem examination identified a high degree of embolic fat occluding pulmonary capillaries. A massive
embolic shower was established as the cause of death.
Schwarz T, Störk CK, Mellor D, Sullivan M (2000). Osteopenia and other radiographic
signs in canine hyperadrenocorticism.
J Small Anim Pract:41, 491-495.
The specificity of conventional radiography in assessing canine hyperadrenocorticism was evaluated
by comparing the Incidence of related radiographic findings in 24 hyperadrenocorticoid, 15 diabetic and 20 hypothyroid dogs.
Hyperadrenocorticoid dogs showed significantly more perihilar bronchial mineralisation than other groups. There was no significant
variation between the disease groups with respect to obesity, hepatomegaly, contour of the caudoventral hepatic margin,
peripheral bronchial mineralisation or osteopenia. Adrenal mineralisation and calcinosis cutis were rare findings observed
only in hyperadrenocorticoid dogs.
The effect of obesity on the radiographic appearance of bone was studied using a dissected lumbar spine from a canine cadaver.
An osteopenic effect could be demonstrated by superimposition of a 10 cm-thick fat block. The low specificity of almost
all common signs in canine hyperadrenocorticism and the low incidence of characteristic findings demonstrate the limited
potential of radiography in assessing this condition. Radiographic assessment of bone density is unreliable because of artefactual
osteopenic effects of high kVp settings necessary in obese dogs.
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