Mature lame animal 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the most common primary bone tumour

A

osteosarcoma

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2
Q

List the osteosarcoma predilection sites

A

proximal humerus
distal radius
proximal tibia
Distal femur

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3
Q

where do osteosarcomas tend to metastasise to

A

lungs- they will have done this by the time of diagnosis

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4
Q

which breeds are predisposed to osteosarcomas

A

Giant and large breeds with average ages of 5-8 years

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5
Q

List the cliical signs of bone neoplasia

A

marked pain with poor response to analgesia
muscle atrophy
moderate swelling
pathological fractures

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6
Q

‘older dog has fractured a limb with no or little history of trauma’ what should you consider

A

could be osteosarcoma

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7
Q

what do we see on radiography with osteosarcomas

A

this may show both a proliferative and destructive pattern
inital changes occur on the endosteal surface
always radiograph the chest

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8
Q

How can we diagnose bone neoplasia

A

usually radiographical signs are enough but we can do core biopsies for definitive diagnosis

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9
Q

Describe treatment of bone neoplasia

A

unlikely to be curative
Limb amputation - provides immediate pain relief
Limb sparing procedures
surgical therapy need to be followed by chemotherapy e.g. carboplatin

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10
Q

what is the prognosis of osteosarcoma in dogs

A

poor
without treatment < 1 month
limb amputation <4-5 months
limb amputation + chemo - 9-10 months

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11
Q

Describe prognosis of osteosarcoma in cats

A

If there is no evidence of metastatic disease then no follow up chemotherapy is advised and median survival times range from 24-44 months

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12
Q

what do you see with nerve root tumours

A

Marked muscle atrophy usually in one limb (a monoparesis) as there is neurogenic as well as disuse atrophy
Painful

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13
Q

How can you detect a nerve root tumour

A

palpation of the axilla and rectal exam- sometimes detect their presence
If not MRI

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14
Q

where can nerve root tumours occur

A

brachial and lumbosacral plexuses

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15
Q

Describe how to treat a never root tumour

A

Surgical resection but this can be difficult and limb amputation is often employed to remove the tumour

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16
Q

what is the prognosis of a nerve root tumour

A

guarded and recurrence within 1 year likely
rarely spread to other sites though

17
Q

Describe cruciate rupture in the cat

A

usually obese, minimal trauma
Extra articular stabilisation but generally improve with rest only

18
Q

What is PADS

A

Patella fracture and dental anomaly syndrome

19
Q

describe PADS

A

Patella fractures in the cat
Associated with retained deciduous teeth and a variety of other typical fractures
They rarely heal

20
Q

How to treat PADS

A

conservative management
circumferential wire, tension bands without pins, pin and tension bands, circumferential wire and pin and tension band

21
Q

when does Capital physis separation occur in cats normally

A

Usually the cat is 6-7 months old

22
Q

List 6 clinical signs of joint disease in the dog and cat

A

walking stiffly
lameness in one or several limbs
swollen joints
pain on manipulation
reduced range of motion
muscle atrophy

23
Q

List 6 possible causes of secondary arthritis

A

developmental conditions
degenerative conditions
inflammatory arthropathies
trauma
sepsis
crystal induced - RARE

24
Q

Describe the pathophysiology of osteoarthritis

A

Weight bearing areas of the joint undergo fibrillation (fraying) of the articular cartilage
causes exposure of subchondral bone to synovial fluid–> sclerosis and osteophytes produced –> joint re-modelling

25
Q

List some examples of drugs used to treat/ manage osteoarthritis

A

Analgesia - e.g.
1. NSAIDs (really just want it to affect COX-2)
2. Opiates- for acute flare ups
3. Paracetamol - useful adjunct to NSAID- only in dog
3. Monoclonal antibosies
4. Disease modifying osteoarthritic drugs- e.g. cartrophen

26
Q

List 2 options for management of oestoarthritis

A

weight loss
physio/ hydrotherapy

27
Q

How to treat cruciate rupture in cats

A

they generally just improve with just rest but TTA and TPLO can be attempted

28
Q

clinical signs of capital physis separation in cats

A

obvious hip pain and difficulty jumping

29
Q

How to repair capital physis separation

A

stabilise with wires or a lag screw

30
Q

How do we diagnose joint disease

A

clinical exam
manipulation
radiography
CT
joint taps
arthroscopy
ultrasound