Tibial Crest Avulsion
Posted: Sat Aug 24, 2019 10:35 pm
Aloha Laurie,
Hope you are well, all considering.
I will be seeing a 6 month old Sheltie for continued care of a tibial crest avulsion with Salter Harris II fracture (and a fibula fx on the side. At the end of July, he fell off an embankment when going for a flock of birds. Went to his primary DVM where xrays were performed, but no pathology was seen. Continued lameness and recheck xrays done approximately 2 weeks later showed more evidence of the pathology to the tibia. The dog was referred to the surgeon (about 3 weeks after the initial injury), but surgery was ultimately deemed unlikely to help based of the timing (more ideal to fix within a week of the injury?) and the presence of healing. The dog is being sent over to me expedite healing and “oversight for gradual return to activity and improvement in motor control.” If no improvement in degree of lameness or an angular limb deformity develops, then surgery is to be reconsidered. The dog is toe-touching lame, according to owner.
From the most recent x-rays done with the surgeon (attached), there also looks to be a pretty good slope developing at the tibial crest, which I am a bit concerned about.
Inquiring about guidance for a potential plan. initially:
1) Facilitate bone healing over the next 3-4 weeks. To include PEMF and exercise modification. I read your blog concerning laser therapy over growth plates (it’s nice when all the papers are in one place!) and while I agree the answer is kinda deemed “case by case”, would you have concern about lasering a growth plate that is already compromised/unhealthy?
2) Take care of axial skeleton and compensatory issues with manual therapy and acupuncture.
3) Light ROM for the stifle
4) Exercise? Nothing excessive for stifle flexion/eccentric quad, but weight-bearing/balance?
Once the fracture site has (potentially) healed, then the plan would be to slowly strength the heck out of the quad and glute?
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
Jake
Hope you are well, all considering.
I will be seeing a 6 month old Sheltie for continued care of a tibial crest avulsion with Salter Harris II fracture (and a fibula fx on the side. At the end of July, he fell off an embankment when going for a flock of birds. Went to his primary DVM where xrays were performed, but no pathology was seen. Continued lameness and recheck xrays done approximately 2 weeks later showed more evidence of the pathology to the tibia. The dog was referred to the surgeon (about 3 weeks after the initial injury), but surgery was ultimately deemed unlikely to help based of the timing (more ideal to fix within a week of the injury?) and the presence of healing. The dog is being sent over to me expedite healing and “oversight for gradual return to activity and improvement in motor control.” If no improvement in degree of lameness or an angular limb deformity develops, then surgery is to be reconsidered. The dog is toe-touching lame, according to owner.
From the most recent x-rays done with the surgeon (attached), there also looks to be a pretty good slope developing at the tibial crest, which I am a bit concerned about.
Inquiring about guidance for a potential plan. initially:
1) Facilitate bone healing over the next 3-4 weeks. To include PEMF and exercise modification. I read your blog concerning laser therapy over growth plates (it’s nice when all the papers are in one place!) and while I agree the answer is kinda deemed “case by case”, would you have concern about lasering a growth plate that is already compromised/unhealthy?
2) Take care of axial skeleton and compensatory issues with manual therapy and acupuncture.
3) Light ROM for the stifle
4) Exercise? Nothing excessive for stifle flexion/eccentric quad, but weight-bearing/balance?
Once the fracture site has (potentially) healed, then the plan would be to slowly strength the heck out of the quad and glute?
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
Jake