Owner-reported treatments and outcomes of perceived injuries to the thoracic and pelvic limb of agility dogs
Bianca M. Alva, Arielle Pechette Markley, Abigail Shoben, Nina R. Kieves

TL;DR
This study examines how agility dogs' injuries are treated and how quickly they return to training and competition.
Contribution
The study provides insights into veterinary care-seeking behavior and treatment outcomes for agility dogs' injuries.
Findings
Over 80% of agility dog injuries led to veterinary care, with specialty care most common for stifle, iliopsoas, and tibia injuries.
Rest was the most common treatment, and most dogs returned to sport within 3 months, except those with stifle injuries.
Stifle injuries had longer recovery times and higher retirement rates compared to other injuries.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to identify the type of veterinary care sought by handlers of injured agility dogs, the types of treatments the dogs received, and the timeframe for return to training and competition. Owners of agility dogs completed an internet-based survey. They were instructed to report injuries that had kept the dog from training or competing for over a week, identify which area(s) of the body had been injured and answer questions about the most severe injury to each body part. Additional questions included if handlers had sought veterinary care, who primarily determined treatment, type of treatment(s), and length of time before the dog could return to full training and competition. This sample included data on 1,714 total injuries from 1,256 unique dogs. Handlers sought veterinary care for over 80% of injuries across all anatomical locations. Handlers were most likely…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVeterinary Orthopedics and Neurology · Orthopedic Surgery and Rehabilitation · Bone fractures and treatments
