Soft Tissue Injuries Flashcards
What is the important of soft tissue injuries in veterinary practice?
- All animals
- Lameness
- Pain
- Loss of function
- Welfare
- Performance animals
- Decreased performance/inhibition of performance
- Production animals
- Decreased production/inhibition of production
What are the most 2 common types of soft tissue injuries?
Percutaneous
Overstrain
What are percutaneous soft tissue injuries?
- Full thickness laceration
- Partial thickness laceration
Some sort of wound, percutaneous injury, that then directly affects soft tissues. Certain soft tissues which are less concerned about than others. Don’t worry about extensor tendon, horse will manage fine - horse will adapt and learn to flick leg forward. If equivalent injury on plantar or palmar part of limb - palmar much more difficult to heal and are much more important to the long term prognosis
What are overstrain soft tissue injuries?
- Acute onset overload (overwhelming tensile strength)
- Molecular degeneration preceeding strain
Overstrain - overloading, causes structure to break down. Most common injury in performance animals - chronic fatigue and eventually, normal strength of structure is exceeded and fibres start to break down. Usually look acute, but if often chronic as there is small amounts of microdamage that accumulate and cause the injury to happen.
What are some common locations of soft tissue injuries in horses and dogs?
Common locations of soft tissue injuries
- Tendons
- Horses:
- SDFT (esp. race horses)
- DDFT
- Horses:
- Ligaments
- Horses:
- Suspensory ligament
- Proximal suspensory desmitis (esp. Dressage horses)
- Suspensory branch desmitis
- Dogs:
- Achilles
- Biceps brachii
- Cruciate ligament disease
- Collateral ligaments
How can you use the history to diagnose tendon and ligament injuries?
- Duration of problem
- Onset of problem
- Exacerbation of problem
- Presenting signs
- Response to treatment
How can you use clinical evaluation to diagnose tendon and ligament injuries?
Clinical evaluation
- Evaluate stance/ posture
- Palpate limbs with animal standing
- Swelling
- Heat
- Pain on palpation
- Lift limb and palpate when soft tissues relaxed
- Lift contralateral limb
- Check range of motion
- No weight bearing palpation as well as weight bearing
- Always look at contralateral limb - animals are good at balancing weight in subtle ways, so may look normal until you increase the load on it by holding one leg up
What is the likely problem here?
Forelimb normal, hindlimbs there is marked hyperextension of both metatarsal phalangeal joints - worse on right HL. No wounds. Use anatomy we can suspect severe extensive breakdown of suspensory apparatus
If you just have a sunken fetlock, what is likely tobe dysfunctioning? (equine)
Just a small sink of fetlock - just a SDFT dysfunction
If you have a sunken fetlock AND toe off the ground, what is likely to be dysfunctioning? (equine)
SDFT and DDFT dysfunction if fetlock sunk AND toe off the ground
If you have a collapsed fetlock AND toe off the ground - what is likely to be dysfunctioned? (equine)
If COLLAPSED fetlock AND toe off the ground, SDFT, DDFT and suspensory ligament dysfunction
If you have knuckling, what soft tissue structure is likely to be dysfunctioning? (equine)
Extensor dysfunction
What is the emergency treatment for soft tissue injuries?
- Aim: Stabilise limb and restore biomechanical function
- Local wound care
- Antibiotics and Anti-inflammatories
- Stabilise limb
- Flexor tendon dysfunction
- Bandage limb and apply palmar or dorsal splint or use commercial splint (ie Kimsey)
- Extensor tendon dysfunction
- Bandage and dorsal splint
- Flexor tendon dysfunction
When treating a soft tissue injury, how should you stabilise it?
Try to get limb into single bony collar, want the force to go through the bones and not through the soft tissues. Transfer forces through bone so as not to disrupt STs any further
What are the principles of ultrasonography when looking for soft tissue injuries?
- Know anatomy!!!
- Use contralateral limb/ side
- Use identical conditions ie weight bearing evenly
- Prepare area of interest
- Clip area to increase contact
- Use plenty of ultrasound gel
- Use transverse and longitudinal images
- Maximise you chance of recognising a lesion
- Image at approximately 7 days after injury
When using ultrasound to look for a soft tissue injuries, when should you US?
To maximise chance of recognising a lesion, image at approxiamtely 7 days after injury
Some ST injuries are not immediately apparent, sometimes takes a few days and the fibres get broken up more by MMPS and macrophages to eat away broken bits, for it to become apparent
What are some strengths and weaknesses of ultrasonography when looking for soft tissue injuries?
Strengths
- Good for soft tissues
- Good for bony surface
- Easy and quick to perform
- Portable unit
- GA not necessary
- Oedema of soft tissue injury provides excellent contrast
Weaknesses
- Expensive equipment
- Experience in interpretation necessary
- 2D images obtained