Dalton et al: Minimally invasive repair of acetabular fractures in dogs: Ex vivo feasibility study and case report
Veterinary Surgery 6, 2023

🔍 Key Findings

  • Minimally invasive repair of acetabular fractures using precontoured plates on 3D-printed models is feasible and technically reproducible in dogs.
  • All cadavers had fracture gaps <2 mm and step defects <1 mm, indicating accurate reduction.
  • Sciatic nerve injury was minimal or absent in all cases, supporting potential neuroprotection from indirect approaches.
  • Pelvic angulation was maintained <5°, confirming preservation of alignment post-reduction.
  • Surgical time averaged ~46 minutes in cadavers for both approaches and repair.
  • Clinical case showed good radiographic healing by 8 weeks and full union by 3 months, with early weight-bearing post-op.
  • Use of locking screws improved reduction fidelity, particularly across a broad plate span.
  • 3D printing accelerated surgical planning, though its necessity remains debated due to the availability and cost concerns.

Simini Surgery Review Podcast

How critical is this paper for crushing the Boards?

🚨 Must-know. I’d bet on seeing this.

📚 Useful background, not must-know.

💤 Skip it. Doubt it’ll ever show up.

Thanks for the feedback!
We'll keep fine-tuning the articles vault.
Oops — didn’t go through.
Mind trying that again?

Dalton et al: Minimally invasive repair of acetabular fractures in dogs: Ex vivo feasibility study and case report
Veterinary Surgery 6, 2023

🔍 Key Findings

  • Minimally invasive repair of acetabular fractures using precontoured plates on 3D-printed models is feasible and technically reproducible in dogs.
  • All cadavers had fracture gaps <2 mm and step defects <1 mm, indicating accurate reduction.
  • Sciatic nerve injury was minimal or absent in all cases, supporting potential neuroprotection from indirect approaches.
  • Pelvic angulation was maintained <5°, confirming preservation of alignment post-reduction.
  • Surgical time averaged ~46 minutes in cadavers for both approaches and repair.
  • Clinical case showed good radiographic healing by 8 weeks and full union by 3 months, with early weight-bearing post-op.
  • Use of locking screws improved reduction fidelity, particularly across a broad plate span.
  • 3D printing accelerated surgical planning, though its necessity remains debated due to the availability and cost concerns.

Simini Surgery Review Podcast

Know What Matters in the Literature - and Why

We distill peer-reviewed surgical studies into clinically relevant summaries and
exam-style questions, so you can make informed decisions with confidence.

Free Access. No Spam. Just Smarter Surgical Learning

Multiple Choice Questions on this study

In Dalton 2023 et al., on acetabular fracture repair, what was the observed rate of sciatic nerve injury in cadaveric repairs?

A. Observed in all cadavers
B. Observed in 3 of 5 cadavers
C. Only observed with caudal approach
D. One mild case out of five
E. All nerves showed severe injury

Answer: One mild case out of five

Explanation: Only one cadaver had mild sciatic nerve injury; others had no injury on gross dissection.
In Dalton 2023 et al., on acetabular fracture repair, what was the purpose of using mirrored 3D-printed hemipelves in the cadaveric and clinical cases?

A. To calculate femoral torsion
B. To simulate bilateral fractures
C. To contour patient-specific bone plates
D. To test fluoroscopic accuracy
E. To replicate neurologic structures

Answer: To contour patient-specific bone plates

Explanation: Plates were pre-contoured to mirrored hemipelves to match normal anatomy for each individual case.
In Dalton 2023 et al., on acetabular fracture repair, what was the median postoperative fracture gap reported in canine cadavers?

A. >3 mm
B. 2–3 mm
C. <2 mm
D. 1.5–2.5 mm
E. >5 mm

Answer: <2 mm

Explanation: The median postoperative fracture gap was consistently less than 2 mm in all cadaver specimens, demonstrating precise fracture reduction.
In Dalton 2023 et al., on acetabular fracture repair, what was a reported potential benefit of the minimally invasive approach compared to traditional open techniques?

A. Ability to avoid fluoroscopy
B. Direct visual assessment of sciatic nerve
C. Higher rate of compression
D. Reduced retraction-related nerve injury
E. Shorter plate working length

Answer: Reduced retraction-related nerve injury

Explanation: Reduced risk to the sciatic nerve was noted, likely due to avoidance of direct retraction and protection by preserved soft tissues.
In Dalton 2023 et al., on acetabular fracture repair, how did the clinical case dog recover following minimally invasive acetabular fracture repair?

A. Non-weight bearing for 6 weeks
B. Required revision surgery
C. Weight-bearing within 24 hours, full healing at 3 months
D. Partial healing with persistent lameness
E. Developed severe sciatic nerve deficits

Answer: Weight-bearing within 24 hours, full healing at 3 months

Explanation: The clinical case recovered rapidly, bearing weight within 1 day and showing full healing by 3 months.

Access the full library of surgical summaries and exam-style questions.

Educational content developed independently and supported by Simini.

The maker of Simini Protect Lavage.