Incorporating a rehabilitation ethos into the management of canine osteoarthritis

Author:

Capon Hannah1

Affiliation:

1. Director, Canine Arthritis Management, 68 Middle Road, Brighton, BN43 6GA, UK

Abstract

Osteoarthritis is a painful and debilitating degenerative condition with an extremely high incidence. Consequently, it is frequently encountered in first opinion practice and was recently cited as a primary cause of welfare compromise through extensive population studies carried out by Vet Compass, a division of the Royal Veterinary College. In the preceding article of this series (https://doi.org/10.12968/coan.2021.0014), the author provided a brief overview of the complexity of chronic pain associated with osteoarthritis and advocated for a polypharmacy approach guided by the clinical presentation. However, pain is only one clinical manifestation of degenerative joint disease. Osteoarthritis affects the whole joint and local support structures, as well as impacting the entire musculoskeletal system. Interventions targeting the multitude of consequences of this disease are likely to have greater impact on long-term analgesia, independent mobility, function, longevity and overall health-related quality of life. This article introduces the clinical reasoning and evidence base associated with an integrated multimodal approach to a multifaceted and complex disease.

Publisher

Mark Allen Group

Subject

General Engineering

Reference43 articles.

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2. Belshaw Z. Decision making and welfare assessment in canine osteoarthritis. 2017. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham, School of Veterinary Medicine and Science.

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5. THE EFFECT OF ICE ON INTRA-ARTICULAR TEMPERATURE IN THE KNEE OF THE DOG

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