P3 and navicular fractures Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 main causes of navicular and P3 fractures

A

acute onset trauma
developmental / osteochondral fragments
repetitive wear and tear/ chronic disease

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2
Q

describe the clinical signs of navicular/ P3 fractures

A

because enclosed within hoof capsule- often minimal displacement - so hard to identify on exam but important
Careful palpation of the hoof and pastern region for heat, pain and swelling (including synovial effusions)
Use of hoof testers to identify site of pain

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3
Q

what signs are seen with small extra articular fragments of navicular/ P3 fractures

A

low grade lameness with minimal localising signs

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4
Q

if complete/ significant navicular/ P3 fractures what do we see

A

acute onset, severe lameness with localising signs (bounding digital pulses, heat in hoof, positive response to hoof testers)

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5
Q

If articular fracture of navicular/ P3 what do we see

A

Distal interphalangeal joint effusion (pedal bone and navicular bone)

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6
Q

If there is tendon involvement with navicular/ P3 fracture what do we see

A

digital flexor tendon sheath effusion (navicular bone)

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7
Q

Describe how to diagnose Navicular/ P3 fracture

A

radiography
MRI
CT
gamma scintigraphy

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8
Q

if see acute severe lameness with marked inflammation or effusion what should you do

A

This is a flag for an acute fracture and would be imaged first and not blocked.

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9
Q

List 2 potential problems with radiography to diagnose navicular/ P3 fractures

A

The hoof structure holds the bones together so fractures may not be visible initially, until some bone resorption has occurred (7-10 days)

Some fractures only heal with a fibrous union (fracture line remains on radiographs, but are stable)

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10
Q

List 4 possible causes of fragment at the site of the extensor process on P3

A

Recent fracture
Previous fracture, now healed and stabilised
Separate centre of ossification
Dystrophic mineralisation in the extensor tendon

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11
Q

List the 5 views that make up s foot radiographic series

A
  1. Lateromedial
  2. Dorsopalmar
  3. Dorsoproximal Palmarodistal 60o oblique centered on pedal bone (upright pedal)
  4. Dorsoproximal Palmarodistal 60o oblique centered on navicular bone (upright navicular)
  5. Palmaroproximal Palmarodistal 45o oblique (flexor navicular)

Of both feet!

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12
Q

what do you need to do before taking a Upright Pedal/D60Pr-PaDi oblique radiograph

A

pack foot with play doh to avoid air aretfact

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13
Q

Why do P3 or navicular fractures often don’t displace

A

due to them being enclosed in the hoof capsule

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14
Q

if we don’t see a fracture on radiography, does this mean there isn’t one

A

No- sometimes fractures occur but are held together well by the hoof

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15
Q

if we do see a fracture on radiography does this mean it is significant

A

no- sometimes when fractures heal, they heal with a fibrous union

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16
Q

how can we test if a bone fragment or fracture is clinically significant

A

flexion tests or synoviocentesis