| Literature DB >> 26407863 |
A Villamonte-Chevalier1, H van Bree2, Bjg Broeckx3, W Dingemanse4, M Soler5, B Van Ryssen6, I Gielen7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diagnostic imaging is essential to assess the lame patient; lesions of the elbow joint have traditionally been evaluated radiographically, however computed tomography (CT) has been suggested as a useful technique to diagnose various elbow pathologies. The primary objective of this study was to determine the sensitivity and specificity of CT to assess medial coronoid disease (MCD), using arthroscopy as gold standard. The secondary objective was to ascertain the radiographic sensitivity and specificity for MCD compared with CT.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26407863 PMCID: PMC4582713 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-015-0556-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
List of dog breeds included in the study
| Breed | # of dogs |
|---|---|
| Labrador retriever | 17 |
| Golden retriever | 10 |
| Bernese mountain dog, Rottweiler | 8 |
| Mongrel | 7 |
| American staffordshire | 4 |
| Dogue de Bourdeaux, English Bulldog | 3 |
| Border Collie, Bouvier, Boxer, German shepherd, Münsterländer, Wetterhound | 2 |
| Argentino mastiff, Australian shepherd, Bassett, Beagle, Burbul, Cavalier king Charles, Chow Chow, Cocker spaniel, Staffordshire bull terrier, Fox terrier, Greater swiss mountain dog, Kromfhorländer, Landseer, Pug, Pyrenean shepherd, Schapendoes, St. Bernand, Viszla | 1 |
Results for radiographic, CT and arthroscopic assessment for n = 141 and radiographic and CT assessment of n = 180
| Radiography ( | CT ( | Arthroscopy ( | Radiography ( | CT ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | 11 | 13 | 14 | 28 | 39 |
| MCD | 130 | 128 | 127 | 152 | 141 |
Fig. 1Radiographic, computed tomographic and arthroscopic findings of the canine elbow joint of a 20 month old Labrador retriever. Radiographic (latero-medial extended (a), latero-medial flexed (b), and cranio caudal (c) projections), computed tomographic (d-e) and arthroscopic (f) images of the left elbow joint from a male, 20 month old Labrador retriever. Radiographic images show subtrochlear sclerosis (white arrow) and the medial coronoid process is unclearly delineated with a heterogeneous density (arrowhead). The transverse CT images in bone algorithm at the level the medial coronoid process (d-e) demonstrate a hiperattenuated medial coronoid process with a fissure line and a non-displaced fragment (white arrow). On the arthroscopic image (f) of the same elbow joint, a fissure line of the articular cartilage of the medial coronoid process is visible (white arrow)
Fig. 2Radiographic, computed tomographic and arthroscopic findings of the canine elbow joint of a 5.5 month old Bernese mountain dog. Radiographic (latero-medial extended (a), latero-medial flexed (b), and cranio caudal (c) projections), computed tomographic (d-e) and arthroscopic (f) images of the left elbow joint from a male, 5.5 month old Bernese mountain dog. Radiographic images show subtrochlear sclerosis (white arrow) and the medial coronoid process is unclearly delineated (arrowhead). The transverse CT images in bone algorithm at the level the medial coronoid process (d-e) demonstrate the heterogeneous aspect of the medial coronoid process with a slightly-displaced fragment (white arrow). On the arthroscopic image (f) of the same elbow joint, a fragment of the medial coronoid process is visible (white arrow)
Fig. 3Radiographic, computed tomographic and arthroscopic findings of the canine elbow joint of a 12 month old Pug. Radiographic (latero-medial extended (a), latero-medial flexed (b), and cranio-caudal (c) projections), computed tomographic (d-e) and arthroscopic (f) images of the right elbow joint from a male, 12 month old Pug. Radiographic images show subtrochlear sclerosis (white arrow) and the medial coronoid process is unclearly delineated with a heterogeneous density (arrowhead). The transverse CT images in bone algorithm at the level the medial coronoid process (d-e) demonstrate the heterogeneous aspect of the medial coronoid process with a non-displaced fragment (white arrow). On the arthroscopic image (f) of the same elbow joint, a normal appearance of the medial coronoid process is visible (white arrow)
Sensitivity and specificity values of CT and radiography
| CT // arthroscopy ( | Radiography // CT ( | Radiography // CT ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 93 % | 98 % | 98 % |
| Specificity | 100 % | 69 % | 64 % |