2.8 Equine Tendon and Ligament Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are common signs of equine tendon and ligament injury?

A
  • reduced weight bearing with reduced joint extension: stiff tendon
  • hyperextension of the metacarpophalangeal joint when standing
  • swelling of the metacarpal area
  • edema of the limb
  • pain on palpation
  • tendon laxity on palpation
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2
Q

Review equine limb tendon anatomy

A

note that the annular ligament and manica flexoria are sheathes that cover the flexor tendons; manica flexoria is an extension of the SDFT that wraps the DDFT; the annular ligament is a fibrous band that wraps around both flexor tendons. Both the MF and the AL are near the fetlock (metocarpophalangeal joint)

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3
Q

How do you diagnose tendon and ligament disease?

A

(1) palpation and visualization of the clinical signs

(2) ultrasonography to confirm diagnosis

  • both the affected limb and the normal limb
  • can use a stand-off pad (SDFT is close to the skin)
  • assess ~7 days after injury to give prognosis

(3) other

  • +/- scintigraphy
  • +/- diagnostic analgesia
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4
Q

What are the most common tendinopathies of the horse?

A

(1) SDFT tendinopathy

  • most common
  • palmar metacarpal swelling
  • US core lesion (hypoechoic)

(2) DDFT tendinopathy

  • digital sheathe or navicular bursa

(5) accessory ligament (of the DDFT) desmitis

  • proximal and lateral metacarpal swelling
  • dorsal to SDFT
  • lameness often absent

(3) proximal suspensory ligament desmitis

  • most common site in sport horses
  • over extension of metacarpophalangeal joint
  • proximal metacarpal/tarsal swelling

(4) suspensory body and branch desmitis

  • often bilateral, concurrent splint bone fractures

(6) tenosynovitis

  • inflammation of the tendon sheathe

(7) annular ligament syndrome (ALS)

  • thickening of the palmar or plantar annular ligament (PAL >2mm) which may or may not also involve the digital sheath and other associated structures

(8) intra-thecal tendon tears

SDFT core lesion (left); normal (right)
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5
Q

How do you choose treatment for tendonitis in the horse?

A

many old treatments are deleterious or have no effect; few evidence-based treatment choices - must choose based on:

  • tendon pathology
  • phase of tendon healing (acute, subacute, chronic)
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6
Q

What is the acute inflammatory phase of equine tendonitis?

A

0-2 weeks

  • pain, heat, swelling, lameness
  • hemorrhage, edema

treatment

  • minimize inflammation: cold therapy, compression, short-acting steroids (beware laminitis), NSAIDs
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7
Q

What is the subacute inflammatory phase of equine tendonitis?

A

1 week - 6 months

  • reduction or absence of lameness
  • resolution of inflammation

treatment:

  • promote fibroplasia
  • optomize scar organization
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8
Q

What is the chronic inflammatory phase of equine tendonitis?

A

3 - 18 months

  • tendon size decreases
  • tendon less pliable
  • reduced fetlock extension (contractures)

treatment:

  • premote remodelling: controlled, ascending exercise
  • prevent re-injury
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9
Q

What is the specific therapy for proximal suspensory desmitis?

A

extracorporeal shock wave therapy

for hindlimb PSD that is not responding to conservative management:

  • fasciotomy and neurectomy
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10
Q

What is the specific therapy for intra-thecal tendon/ligament issues?

A

use a scope to debride and remove torn tissue

  • hindlimb (manica flexoria tears): good prognosis (70-80%)
  • forelimb (DDFT tears): poorer prognosis (20-40%)
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11
Q

What are the developmental diseases of the equine tendon?

A
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