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Large Animal Surgery

Large Animal Surgery. Angular limb deformities. What subset of the population most commonly gets flexor tendon laxity. Premature foals. What is the pathogenesis of flexor tendon laxity. Uterine malposition Premature parturition Flaccidity of flexor muscles

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Large Animal Surgery

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  1. Large Animal Surgery Angular limb deformities

  2. What subset of the population most commonly gets flexor tendon laxity • Premature foals

  3. What is the pathogenesis of flexor tendon laxity • Uterine malposition • Premature parturition • Flaccidity of flexor muscles • Misc mare factors (infections, nutrition etc)

  4. What is the treatment for flexor tendon laxity • Controlled exercise is usually sufficient • Also swimming or a glue on shoe with palmar extension in severe cases

  5. What is the prognosis for flexor tendon laxity • Good

  6. How long does it usually take for full recovery • Full recovery in about 2 weeks

  7. Why do you not cast or splint foals with flexor tendon laxity • Weakening of the soft tissue supporting structures which causes articular laxity upon cast removal

  8. Following cast removal how long should return to exercise take • As long as the limb was immobilized

  9. What does an injury to the DDF look like • Toe is pointing up

  10. What is the treatment for DDF laceration or laxity • Suture the tendon together • Orthopedic shoe with raised and extended heal

  11. What is club foot • Flexural deformity of the coffin joint

  12. Where and in what age group is club foot most common • Young animals • In the thoracic limb

  13. What is the medical treatment for flexural deformity • Controlled exercise • Lower nutrition plane • Physical therapy • Bandage splints or casts • Oxytet 3 grams • Phenylbutazone • Corrective shoeing • Hoof trimming

  14. How does oxytet help • Binds the calcium relaxing the muscle

  15. Do cows have a check ligament • No

  16. What is the treatment for a calf with a contracted tendon • Physical therapy and stretching • Can glue a shoe on with an extended toe

  17. What is the surgical therapy for a contracted tendon in cattle • Cut SDF, DDF and maybe the joint capsule

  18. If you cut the SDF or DDF what else must you do • Cast or splint

  19. What happens after the cast is removed • Tendon laxity

  20. What is the prognosis for return to function • Guarded to poor

  21. What is your diagnosis • Chronic club foot

  22. How do you differentiate this from laminitis • P3 is parallel to the hoof wall which would not be the case if this horse had laminitis

  23. How do you trim the hoof to overcome club foot • Trim the heal • Leave the toe long

  24. What else can be done besides the extended toe • Use padding between the shoe and the hoof • To raise the toe and stretch the flexor tendon

  25. What is the surgical treatment for club foot • Inferior check ligament desmotomy

  26. When would you do surgery for club foot • Cases that are refractory to medical treatment

  27. What may need to be the treatment in very severe cases of club foot • Incise the entire DDF

  28. How does fetlock flexural deformity develop • Usually acquired • Over nutrition or decreased use of the leg due to pain

  29. Which limb is fetlock flexural deformity most common in • More common in the forelimb

  30. What age is fetlock and pastern flexural deformity most commonly seen in • Yearlings • 8-18 months

  31. What are the parameters to designate a severe case of fetlock flexural deformity • >180 degree rotation

  32. What may have to be done in these severe cases • May have to cut both check ligaments and SDF

  33. What is the treatment for a mild case of fetlock flexural deformity • Toe extensions, decrease feeding

  34. What is the treatment for a moderate case of fetlock flexural deformity • Proximal check ligament desmotomy (maybe also distal check desmotomy)

  35. What is the prognosis for club foot • Good

  36. What is the prognosis for flexural deformity • Guarded

  37. What prenatal factors may cause angular limb deformities • Periarticular laxity, hypoplasia of cuboidal bones, teratogenic insult, placentitis, hormonal nutritional imbalances

  38. What postnatal factors may cause angular limb deformities • Unfavorable limb conformation • Excessive growth rate • Physeal injuries • Continuous overloading of the physis

  39. If you find an angular limb deformity what else should you look for • Another congenital anomaly

  40. What is ill thrift syndrome in llamas • Poor growth rates with ALD

  41. What other things were found in the lab work on these llamas • Hypothyroidism • Anemia • Erythrocyte dyscrasia

  42. What is the conservative treatment of ALD • Stall rest • Physical therapy • Splinting/ casts

  43. Describe the cast that would be used for ALD • They do not include the foot so that the tendons can accept weight properly

  44. If the ALD is manually reducible what are the probable causes • Periarticular laxity • Hypoplasia of the cuboidal bones (early stage)

  45. If the ALD is not manually reducible what are the probable causes • Asynchronous physeal or epiphyseal growth • Untreated cases of cuboidal bone hypoplasia • Diaphyseal deformities

  46. When do the carpal bones ossify • Should be ossified at birth

  47. What can happen if carpal/tarsal bone hypoplasia is not corrected • Can result in crushed carpal bones leading to permanent lameness

  48. Which animals tend to have hypoplasia of the carpal/tarsal bones • Premature, dysmature and twins

  49. How do you treat hypoplasia of the carpal/tarsal bones • Tube cast (not including the foot or the fetlock)

  50. How long does it take for ossification to be completed • 2-4 weeks

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