
Your Custom Quiz
In Dekerle 2022 et al., on ectopic ureter correction, what was the **median duration of continence** after surgery in dogs that became continent?
🔍 Key Findings
- Cystoscopic-guided laser ablation (CLA) was associated with significantly fewer minor complications (13%) than neoureterostomy (100%) (P < .01)
- CLA resulted in significantly fewer recurrences of incontinence compared to neoureterostomy (0/7 vs 5/12; P < .05)
- 80% of dogs achieved continence within 1 month postoperatively, with a median continence score of 10
- Long-term continence was achieved in 88% of dogs, with or without adjunctive treatment, over a median of 66 months
- Major complications occurred in only 8% of dogs, and all were successfully managed with surgical revision
- Persistent ureteral remnants were seen only in neoureterostomy dogs, potentially contributing to incontinence recurrence
- All dogs with incontinence recurrence responded to medical treatment, while only 1/5 with persistent incontinence after surgery did
- CLA is recommended over open surgery for iEU correction, due to lower complication and recurrence rates
Veterinary Surgery
4
2022
Outcomes of 25 female dogs treated for ectopic ureters by open surgery or cystoscopic-guided laser ablation
2022-4-VS-dekerle-3
In Fidelis 2025 et al., on suture eyelet geometry, which two anchors most frequently showed **suture failure at the mid-section**?
🔍 Key Findings
- Raised eyelets caused more suture mid-section failures than embedded eyelets, suggesting wear or cutting against the anchor.
- No significant effect of cyclic loading on failure load (Fmax) was found for any anchor group.
- Anika anchor showed the least reduction in suture strength relative to the reference (eyebolt screw), indicating a favorable design.
- All sutures failed via suture breakage, not anchor pullout, indicating suture fatigue was the primary failure mode.
- Sutures in raised eyelets more often failed at the mid-section, while those in embedded eyelets failed at the knot.
- IMEX and Jorvet anchors showed significantly reduced Fmax compared to eyebolt screws.
- Loading direction and anchor design likely affect wear and ultimate failure, particularly in dynamic in vivo conditions.
- Future designs should aim for embedded, smooth eyelets that can accommodate larger suture sizes without increasing wear.
Veterinary Surgery
6
2025
Effect of suture anchor type, eyelet configuration, and loading condition on suture failure: An in vitro study
2025-6-VS-fidelis-3
In Lemmon 2025 et al., on synovitis severity scoring, what was concluded about the impact of bucket handle meniscal tears on synovitis severity?
🔍 Key Findings
Synovitis was present in 100% of canine stifles with CCL disease (n = 163).
The most frequent severity score was 3/5 (55.2%), followed by 4/5 (24.5%).
Higher synovitis scores were significantly associated with:
- Higher median cartilage scores (p = .042, OR = 2.1 per unit increase)
- Longer duration of clinical signs (p < .001, OR = 1.27 per month)
Bodyweight (p = .083) and sex (p = .17) were not statistically significant in multivariable analysis.
Bucket handle meniscal tears were not associated with synovitis severity.
Clinical implication: Earlier intervention may help reduce synovitis and slow OA progression.
Veterinary Surgery
3
2025
Arthroscopic synovitis severity scoring in canine stifles with cranial cruciate ligament disease
2025-3-VS-lemmon-4
In Forzisi 2025 et al., on femoral growth post-THR, how did femoral cortical width change at 50% femoral length?
🔍 Key Findings
Population: 24 dogs (<8.5 months) undergoing unilateral cementless THR.
Growth Impact:
- Operated femurs showed ~11.5% less trochanteric growth than controls (p = .002).
- No significant difference in femoral diaphyseal + epiphyseal length (p = .712) or femur overall (p = .465).
Cortical Width:
- Increased significantly at 10 mm distal to trochanter (4.6% increase, p = .037) and at 50% femoral length (8.5% increase, p = .030).
Clinical relevance: Despite measurable changes, no clinically significant impairment to femoral length occurred.
Effect Sizes:
- Moderate negative for trochanteric growth.
- Moderate positive for proximal femoral width.
Veterinary Surgery
1
2025
Evaluation of the effects of cementless total hip replacement on femoral length in skeletally immature dogs
2025-1-VS-forzisi-3
In Karydas 2025 et al., on follow-up radiography, what is the recommended role of follow-up imaging in the absence of clinical signs?
🔍 Key Findings
139 immature dogs with humeral condylar fractures (HCF) reviewed retrospectively.
Postoperative plan changed in 17% (23/139) of cases.
Key risk factors for plan change:
- Owner concerns (OR: 7.6)
- Analgesic use at follow-up (OR: 7.9)
- Lameness (OR: 5.9)
- Abnormal clinical exam (OR: 44.8)
- Radiographic abnormalities (OR: 51.9)
No plan changes were based solely on radiographs when clinical signs were absent.
Supracondylar K-wire migration noted in 3.5% of dogs without affecting the clinical plan.
Authors conclude that routine follow-up radiographs offer limited value without concurrent clinical indicators.
Veterinary Surgery
2
2025
Impact of postoperative radiography on the management of humeral condylar fractures in immature dogs
2025-2-VS-karydas-5
In Pfund 2025 et al., on femoral cortical thickness, what was the key preoperative radiographic predictor of femoral fissure or fracture in dogs undergoing THR?
🔍 Key Findings
- Lower CTI values were significantly associated with higher risk of both intraoperative and postoperative femoral fractures or fissures (p <.0001).
- The mean CTI for all dogs was 0.285, whereas dogs with fissures/fractures had a mean CTI of 0.246.
- For each 0.001 increase in CTI, odds of fissure/fracture decreased by 2–3% depending on perioperative timing.
- High interobserver reliability (ICC = 0.984) and consistency between pre- and postoperative CTI measurements (ICC = 0.96).
- CTI was the only significant risk factor identified; age, breed, bodyweight, BCS, CFI, or luxoid hips were not significant.
- Prophylactic lateral plating in dogs with low CTI (mean 0.230) resulted in no postoperative fractures.
- Postoperative fractures occurred in 8% of cases, and 93% of dogs returned to full function within one year.
- CTI may be a useful radiographic screening tool, especially when advanced imaging (e.g., DEXA) is unavailable.
Veterinary Surgery
6
2025
Femoral cortical thickness index in a population of dogs undergoing total hip replacement
2025-6-VS-pfund-1
In Hoenecke 2025 et al., on radiographic opacity in patella luxation, which variable was found to significantly increase the likelihood of radiographic soft tissue opacity in the stifle?
🔍 Key Findings
- 65% of stifles with patella luxation and intact CCLs had increased radiographic soft tissue opacity
- Weight and radiographic OA were significantly associated with increased opacity (p = .0029 and p = .0143)
- Each 1 kg increase in weight increased the odds of opacity by 10%
- Grade of patella luxation, age, and muscle atrophy were not significantly associated with increased opacity
- 19% of dogs with long-term follow-up developed a CCL rupture post-patella surgery, 50% of those had opacity at initial presentation
- Radiographic opacity alone should not be interpreted as CCL disease in dogs with patella luxation
- Radiographic findings likely represent effusion or synovial hyperplasia, not CCL pathology
- Arthrotomy was used to confirm CCL integrity at surgery, but arthroscopy could provide better sensitivity
Veterinary Surgery
7
2025
Increased radiographic stifle soft tissue opacity in dogs with patella luxation
2025-7-VS-hoenecke-1
In Buote 2023 et al., on 3D-printed cannulas in feline laparoscopy, what was the most common cannula-related complication reduced by 3DPCs in the cadaveric model?
🔍 Key Findings
- 3D-printed cannulas (3DPCs) reduced mean surgical time significantly in cadaveric procedures (125.6 vs 95.2 min, p = 0.03).
- Cannula pullout events decreased from a mean of 10 to 2.2 per procedure when using only 3DPCs (p = 0.03).
- Instrument collisions were significantly fewer with 3DPCs (6.8 vs 2.6 collisions, p = 0.03).
- Live patients experienced no postoperative complications, including no incision site infections or discomfort.
- Initial versions of 3DPCs had minor issues, including valve leakage and looser trocar fit, requiring surgical workarounds.
- Customization of cannula shaft length (3 cm vs standard 5–8.3 cm) improved working space and reduced instrument interference.
- Production cost was under $5 per cannula, suggesting 3DPCs may be a cost-effective and reusable alternative for small patients.
- Study supports broader use of 3DPCs in laparoscopic procedures requiring long-jawed instruments or intricate tissue handling.
Veterinary Surgery
6
2023
3D printed cannulas for use in laparoscopic surgery in feline patients: A cadaveric study and case series
2023-6-VS-buote-2
In Nash 2024 et al., on GER frequency, what was the upper reference limit for distal GER events per hour?
🔍 Key Findings Summary
- Population: 35 nonbrachycephalic dogs undergoing orthopedic procedures (TPLO)
- Study design: Prospective observational using transnasal Digitrapper dual-sensor pH probe after short TIVA
- Upper reference limits:
- Distal GER events per hour: 2.4
- Proximal GER events per hour: 0.4
- Cumulative distal acid exposure: 2.3%
- Cumulative proximal acid exposure: 0%
- Median values (normal):
- Distal GER events per hour: 0.3
- Proximal GER events per hour: 0
- Proximal GER observed in 12/31 dogs
- No regurgitation observed in any dog
- No major adverse events with probe use
- Clinical implication: These parameters provide a reference for assessing excessive GER in future canine surgical cases
Veterinary Surgery
1
2024
Esophageal pH‐monitoring in nonbrachycephalic dogs; a reference
2024-1-VS-nash-1
In Wang 2025 et al., on TPLO osteotomy alignment, what was the primary benefit of using intraoperative fluoroscopy?
🔍 Key Findings
- Fluoroscopy-guided osteotomy placement achieved a median postoperative TPA of 3° (range: 0–4.5°), showing excellent accuracy.
- The D1 measurement (from patellar ligament insertion to osteotomy exit) was more reproducible and accurate intraoperatively than D2.
- Median R1 value (D1-based) matched the intended 21 mm radius with only 0.5 mm deviation, while R2 deviated by 2.5 mm.
- Real-time fluoroscopy allowed dynamic limb positioning and reduced osteotomy placement variability.
- Intraoperative fluoroscopy reduced reliance on preoperative planning, especially in cases with difficult anatomy or positioning.
- Radiation exposure was minimal (avg. 3 images per case) and within safe limits using standard protection protocols.
- Study standardized to 21 mm blades and excluded dogs with developmental orthopedic conditions to reduce confounders.
- Targeting a lower postoperative TPA (3°) may reduce meniscal load and cranio-caudal instability, though long-term outcomes require further study.
Veterinary Surgery
7
2025
Accuracy of fluoroscopy-guided osteotomy placement in TPLO: Postoperative tibial plateau angle and preoperative planning evaluation
2025-7-VS-wang-1
Quiz Results
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