Ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft for limb-sparing surgery of the distal radius in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma : clinical communication

Canine osteosarcoma is the most commonly diagnosed primary bone tumour in the dog, affecting mainly large and giant breed dogs with the predilection site being the metaphysis of long bones, specifically the distal radius, proximal humerus, distal femur and proximal tibia and fibula. Treatment option...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: G.S. Irvine-Smith, R.G. Lobetti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2006-06-01
Series:Journal of the South African Veterinary Association
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jsava.co.za/index.php/jsava/article/view/364
id doaj-2c623c1202554c08b6a119d17526569b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2c623c1202554c08b6a119d17526569b2020-11-24T23:41:42ZengAOSISJournal of the South African Veterinary Association1019-91282224-94352006-06-0177315015410.4102/jsava.v77i3.364321Ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft for limb-sparing surgery of the distal radius in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma : clinical communicationG.S. Irvine-SmithR.G. LobettiCanine osteosarcoma is the most commonly diagnosed primary bone tumour in the dog, affecting mainly large and giant breed dogs with the predilection site being the metaphysis of long bones, specifically the distal radius, proximal humerus, distal femur and proximal tibia and fibula. Treatment options are either palliative or curative intent therapy, the latter limb amputation or limb-sparing surgery together with chemotherapy. This article describes the use of an ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft as well as chemotherapy in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma of the distal radius. Both dogs showed minimal complications with the technique and both survived over 381 days following the surgery. Complications seen were loosening of the screws and osteomyelitis. The procedure was well tolerated with excellent limb use. This technique is indicated for use in cases with small tumour size that have not broken through the bone cortex.https://jsava.co.za/index.php/jsava/article/view/364Bone CancerChemotherapyRadiusSurgeryVascularised Autograft
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author G.S. Irvine-Smith
R.G. Lobetti
spellingShingle G.S. Irvine-Smith
R.G. Lobetti
Ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft for limb-sparing surgery of the distal radius in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma : clinical communication
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association
Bone Cancer
Chemotherapy
Radius
Surgery
Vascularised Autograft
author_facet G.S. Irvine-Smith
R.G. Lobetti
author_sort G.S. Irvine-Smith
title Ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft for limb-sparing surgery of the distal radius in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma : clinical communication
title_short Ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft for limb-sparing surgery of the distal radius in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma : clinical communication
title_full Ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft for limb-sparing surgery of the distal radius in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma : clinical communication
title_fullStr Ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft for limb-sparing surgery of the distal radius in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma : clinical communication
title_full_unstemmed Ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft for limb-sparing surgery of the distal radius in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma : clinical communication
title_sort ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft for limb-sparing surgery of the distal radius in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma : clinical communication
publisher AOSIS
series Journal of the South African Veterinary Association
issn 1019-9128
2224-9435
publishDate 2006-06-01
description Canine osteosarcoma is the most commonly diagnosed primary bone tumour in the dog, affecting mainly large and giant breed dogs with the predilection site being the metaphysis of long bones, specifically the distal radius, proximal humerus, distal femur and proximal tibia and fibula. Treatment options are either palliative or curative intent therapy, the latter limb amputation or limb-sparing surgery together with chemotherapy. This article describes the use of an ipsilateral vascularised ulnar transposition autograft as well as chemotherapy in 2 dogs with osteosarcoma of the distal radius. Both dogs showed minimal complications with the technique and both survived over 381 days following the surgery. Complications seen were loosening of the screws and osteomyelitis. The procedure was well tolerated with excellent limb use. This technique is indicated for use in cases with small tumour size that have not broken through the bone cortex.
topic Bone Cancer
Chemotherapy
Radius
Surgery
Vascularised Autograft
url https://jsava.co.za/index.php/jsava/article/view/364
work_keys_str_mv AT gsirvinesmith ipsilateralvascularisedulnartranspositionautograftforlimbsparingsurgeryofthedistalradiusin2dogswithosteosarcomaclinicalcommunication
AT rglobetti ipsilateralvascularisedulnartranspositionautograftforlimbsparingsurgeryofthedistalradiusin2dogswithosteosarcomaclinicalcommunication
_version_ 1725505858916319232