| Literature DB >> 28197406 |
Robert S Gilley1, Elizabeth Hiebert1, Kemba Clapp1, Lara Bartl-Wilson1, Michael Nappier1, Stephen Werre2, Katherine Barnes3.
Abstract
The incidence of complications secondary to fracture stabilization, particularly osteolytic lesions and bony tumor formation, has long been difficult to evaluate. The objective of this study was to describe the long-term incidence of aggressive bony changes developing in dogs with long bone diaphyseal fractures stabilized by metallic bone plates compared to a breed-, sex-, and age-matched control group. The medical records of a tertiary referral center were retrospectively reviewed for dogs that matched each respective criterion. Signalment, history, cause of death (if applicable), and aggressive bony changes at previous fracture sites were recorded. Ninety dogs met the criteria for inclusion in the fracture group and were matched with appropriate control dogs. Four of the dogs in the fracture group developed aggressive bony changes at the site of previous fracture repairs most consistent with osseous neoplasia. One lesion was confirmed with cytology as neoplastic. The population of dogs was mixed with regard to breed and body weight, but all dogs with aggressive bony lesions were male. Incidence of aggressive bony lesion formation in the fracture group was 4 (4.4%) and was 0 (0%) in the control group; three (75%) of the affected dogs in the fracture group included cerclage as a component of their primary fracture stabilizations. Incidence of aggressive bony lesions in the fracture group compared to the control group was determined to be statistically significant (p = 0.0455), as was the incidence of cerclage among dogs affected by aggressive bony lesions compared to the rest of the fracture group (p = 0.0499). Development of aggressive bony lesions is an uncommon complication of fracture fixation. Additional research is needed to further identify and elucidate the long-term effects of metallic implants in dogs.Entities:
Keywords: bone; canine; fracture; implant; osteosarcoma; plate; sarcoma; tumor
Year: 2017 PMID: 28197406 PMCID: PMC5281555 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2017.00003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Signalment, age at time of fracture repair (AAF), age at lesion diagnosis (AAD), surgery-lesion interval (SLI), and bone affected of dogs that developed implant-associated lesions.
| Patient | Breed | Sex | Weight (kg) | AAF (months) | AAD (months) | SLI (months) | Bone |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case 1 | German Shepherd Dog | MN | 36.4 | 71 | 101 | 30 | Humerus |
| Case 2 | Standard Poodle | MN | 20 | 18 | 126 | 108 | Tibia |
| Case 3 | Mixed breed | MN | 30.1 | 146 | 177 | 31 | Femur |
| Case 4 | Miniature Schnauzer | MN | 11.1 | 28 | 91 | 63 | Femur |
MN, male neutered.
Figure 1Craniocaudal radiograph of the femur. (A) This image was acquired immediately postfracture fixation. (B) This image was acquired 2 years later. There is now moth-eaten lysis of the proximal to mid diaphysis of the femur in addition to cortical thinning medially. Spiculated and amorphous periosteal proliferation is present medially and laterally, but is best observed lateral to the compression plate.
Association between prognostic factors and bony lesion formation—fracture group.
| Prognostic factor | |
|---|---|
| Gender | 0.0531 |
| Neuter status | 0.293 |
| Breed | 0.4308 |
| Cerclage | 0.0499 |
| Non-cerclage metallic implants | 1 |
| Non-metallic prosthetics | 1 |
| Bone | 0.0775 |
| Side operated | 0.6657 |
| Body weight (kg) | 0.0862 |
| Age at fracture repair (months) | 0.1426 |
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