# In dogs does the use of bone morphogenetic proteins with internal fixation accelerates fracture healing?

**Authors:** Anthi Anatolitou+, Miltiadis Markou+

PMC · DOI: 10.18849/ve.v10i4.722 · 2025-10-16

## TL;DR

This paper finds no evidence that using bone morphogenetic proteins with internal fixation speeds up fracture healing in dogs compared to internal fixation alone.

## Contribution

The study provides a critical review showing no acceleration in healing with BMPs in canine fracture fixation.

## Key findings

- No evidence supports accelerated healing with BMPs and internal fixation in dogs.
- Veterinarians should consider risks, costs, and case specifics when choosing treatment methods.
- Both methods have potential risks and complications.

## Abstract

In dogs undergoing internal fracture fixation does the use of internal fixation and bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) accelerate healing compared to internal fixation alone?

Treatment.

Zero.

Zero.

There is no evidence showing that dogs undergoing fracture fixation with any internal fixation method (e.g. locking plates, dynamic compression plates) and BMPs present accelerated healing compared to internal fixation alone. In view of the absence of this evidence, it is recommended that veterinarians should base their treatment choice on their experience in internal fixation methods and BMPs usage, their available materials for the methods, the cost, the potential adverse effects, and the case-specific factors. Therefore, veterinarians should acknowledge that both methods have potential risks and complications.

In dogs undergoing fracture fixation, there is no statistical evidence to support fracture fixation with internal fixation and BMPs as a method that accelerates healing compared to internal fixation alone.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** fracture (MESH:D050723)
- **Species:** Canis lupus familiaris (dog, subspecies) [taxon 9615]

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13011121