Surgical limb‐sparing in veterinary medicine: A review of existing techniques in dogs
Johnny Altwal, Bernard Séguin

TL;DR
This paper reviews surgical techniques used to preserve limb function in dogs with bone abnormalities, comparing their outcomes to amputation and highlighting complications.
Contribution
The paper compiles existing literature on limb-sparing surgery in dogs to guide clinical decisions and future research.
Findings
Limb-sparing techniques in dogs can achieve survival times comparable to limb amputation.
Common complications include infection, mechanical failure, and local recurrence.
Research focuses on reducing complications to improve outcomes in limb-sparing surgery.
Abstract
Surgical limb‐sparing in veterinary medicine can be defined as an intervention aimed at preserving limb function when a bone abnormality is present, namely neoplasia or a non‐repairable fracture, and the affected segment of that bone needs to be removed and, most often, replaced. In some cases, the affected segment of bone is treated and reimplanted. It is mostly prevalent in the context of local tumor control while preserving limb function in veterinary surgical oncology but has also been employed for comminuted fracture repair. Importantly, this review focuses on neoplasia and non‐repairable fractures wherein the bones were normal prior to the pathology and the non‐affected segments of bone remain normal in the face of the pathology. Several techniques have been reported and vary based on a number of factors such as anatomic location of the pathology and method of addressing the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVeterinary Orthopedics and Neurology · Veterinary Oncology Research · Bone fractures and treatments
