Traumatic craniolateral shoulder luxation and fracture of the lesser tubercle of the humerus in a dog

Author:

Bergh M. S.,Huck J. L.

Abstract

SummaryA five-year old, spayed female, Bearded Collie was presented with a 24-hour history of non-weight-bearing lameness of the right thoracic limb after sustaining vehicular trauma. Radio-graphs revealed a craniolateral scapulohumeral luxation and a distally and medially displaced fracture of the lesser tubercle of the humerus. Open reduction and internal fixation of the fracture was achieved with lag screw fixation and an anti-rotational Kirsch-ner wire. Surgical repair resulted in compression across the fracture line, anatomic reduction of the articular surface, and a stable scapulohumeral joint following reduction of the humeral head in the glenoid. Six weeks postoperatively, the patient exhibited no evidence of pain or lameness on the right thoracic limb and radiographs revealed complete healing of the fracture and normal articulation of the scapulohumeral joint. This is the first report of a lesser tubercle fracture associated with a craniolateral shoulder luxation. Surgical intervention resulted in the return of full shoulder joint function in this dog.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference12 articles.

1. Talcott KW, Vasseur PB. Luxation of the scapulohumeral joint. In: Slatter D, editor. Handbook of Small Animal Surgery. 3rd Edition. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 2003. pg. 1897-1904.

2. Surgical Stabilization of Recurrent Shoulder Luxation

3. Piermattei DL, Flo GL, DeCamp CE. The Shoulder Joint. In: Brinker, Piermattei and Flo’s Handbook of Small Animal Orthopedics and Fracture Repair. 4th ed. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 2006. pg. 262-296.

4. Piermattei DL. An Atlas of Surgical Approaches to the Bones and Joints of the Dog and Cat. 3rd ed. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 1993.

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