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Palmar Luxation Of The Antebrachiocarpal Joint


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Hi All.

I am currently nursing a six year old maremma.

Excellent temperament, and superior conformation.

However, he has a chronic trauma to his front left leg.

He is ambulatory but winces with discomfort. :cry:

He had an X-ray this morning and what was suspected as a compound break has turned out to be a dislocation.

The radiograph is clear and the one below is a duplicate of what I saw this morning.

post-3970-0-36704600-1341616370_thumb.jpg

This is a palmar luxation of the antebrachiocarpal joint.

My concern is the twofold.

Firstly, whether complete arthrodesis is necessary and secondly what the long term outcomes of any other options are.

Thanks for taking the time.

Edited by Tralee
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Arthrodesis has the highest rate of success for treatment of this injury, particularly in a case where chronicity is a factor, not to mention a large breed, active dog. There are other methods of treatment, however they have lower success rates. Whether they are appropriate will depend on the patient and the opinion of the treating veterinarian.

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Arthrodesis has the highest rate of success for treatment of this injury, particularly in a case where chronicity is a factor, not to mention a large breed, active dog. There are other methods of treatment, however they have lower success rates. Whether they are appropriate will depend on the patient and the opinion of the treating veterinarian.

Thank you rappie

Your response is very welcome.

Is it possible that some, or all of the tendons, may have survived the trauma sufficiently to be restored?

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That looks very ouchy, poor lad.

I have only ever seen ones that have been arthrodesed and they have done well

No doubt.

After taking the dog in from the owner I have restricted the limb and currently have it suspended in a sling.

This allows him to walk for poopy's and wee.

I am slowly conditioning his front leg for three legged movement because he will be facing a three month recovery.

Thanks

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Hi All.

I am currently nursing a six year old maremma.

Excellent temperament, and superior conformation.

However, he has a chronic trauma to his front left leg.

He is ambulatory but winces with discomfort. :cry:

He had an X-ray this morning and what was suspected as a compound break has turned out to be a dislocation.

The radiograph is clear and the one below is a duplicate of what I saw this morning.

post-3970-0-36704600-1341616370_thumb.jpg

This is a palmar luxation of the antebrachiocarpal joint.

My concern is the twofold.

Firstly, whether complete arthrodesis is necessary and secondly what the long term outcomes of any other options are.

Thanks for taking the time.

Just saw this, so sorry to hear :(

I don't know anyting about this but i hope you are able to come up with a solution to help your boy.

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Hi All.

I am currently nursing a six year old maremma.

Excellent temperament, and superior conformation.

However, he has a chronic trauma to his front left leg.

He is ambulatory but winces with discomfort. :cry:

He had an X-ray this morning and what was suspected as a compound break has turned out to be a dislocation.

The radiograph is clear and the one below is a duplicate of what I saw this morning.

post-3970-0-36704600-1341616370_thumb.jpg

This is a palmar luxation of the antebrachiocarpal joint.

My concern is the twofold.

Firstly, whether complete arthrodesis is necessary and secondly what the long term outcomes of any other options are.

Thanks for taking the time.

Just saw this, so sorry to hear :(

I don't know anyting about this but i hope you are able to come up with a solution to help your boy.

Hey!

He's not my dog.

I took him in after his leg had not healed from a suspected break.

He has to go back home but needs surgery and a long recovery first.

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  • 1 month later...

Healing thoughts sent.

I do hope he heals and moves on to the next stage of his life :)

Thanks

Prognosis is good.

Here is a picture of Zuess convalescing.

post-3970-0-26031500-1345341621_thumb.jpg

He is more active, and his appetite has returned. :thumbsup:

But, we're not out of the woods yet.

He has 14 weeks of recovery before an assessment of bone healing.

:crossfingers:

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  • 1 month later...
Seven weeks post-op now. <br style="color: rgb(34, 34, 34); font-family: verdana, tahoma, arial, sans-serif; line-height: 17.600000381469727px; background-color: rgb(238, 242, 247); "><br style="color: rgb(34, 34, 34); font-family: verdana, tahoma, arial, sans-serif; line-height: 17.600000381469727px; background-color: rgb(238, 242, 247); ">Dog is standing confidently on four legs. :thumbsup:

:thumbsup:

:)

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