Cargando…

Epineural Neurorrhaphy of a Large Nerve Defect Due to IatroGenic Sciatic Nerve Injury in a Maltese Dog

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Sciatic nerve injury could occur due to mistake of surgery and called as ‘iatrogenic injury’. This type of injury is rare in dogs. Historically, this injury is treated through physiotherapy. However, if the nerve is completely transected, surgery such as nerve repair could be address...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lee, Hanjung, Lee, Haebeom, Lee, Keyyeon, Roh, Yoonho, Jeong, Seongmok, Kim, Daehyun, Jeong, Jaemin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9324001/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35878378
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci9070361
_version_ 1784756699806040064
author Lee, Hanjung
Lee, Haebeom
Lee, Keyyeon
Roh, Yoonho
Jeong, Seongmok
Kim, Daehyun
Jeong, Jaemin
author_facet Lee, Hanjung
Lee, Haebeom
Lee, Keyyeon
Roh, Yoonho
Jeong, Seongmok
Kim, Daehyun
Jeong, Jaemin
author_sort Lee, Hanjung
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Sciatic nerve injury could occur due to mistake of surgery and called as ‘iatrogenic injury’. This type of injury is rare in dogs. Historically, this injury is treated through physiotherapy. However, if the nerve is completely transected, surgery such as nerve repair could be addressed. Unfortunately, if there is a large gap between transected sciatic nerve, it is very difficult to treat. Sometimes amputation is recommended because of permanent problem with dog’s hind leg. By the way, it is not known how long the gap can be treated in dogs before the important decision of whether to amputate the leg or not. Therefore, we would like to described a good result of treating an iatrogenic sciatic nerve injury with a large defect measuring 20 mm in length in a small Maltese dog. The dog suffered nerve injury after hip joint surgery and could not be walking himself for 2 months. So, we decided to treat him by nerve repair despite of large gap. Sensation and walking function of his hind leg was recovered almost completely after 2.5 years. Although sciatic nerve injury with large gap is a concern, it could be treated through surgery, even in small Maltese. ABSTRACT: Epineural neurorrhaphy is a standard nerve repair method, but it is rarely reported in veterinary literature. Epineural neurorrhaphy in canine sciatic nerve injury are described in this report. An 11-month-old, castrated male Maltese dog, presented with an one-month history of non-weight bearing lameness and knuckling of the right pelvic limb. The dog showed absence of superficial and deep pain perception on the dorsal and lateral surfaces below the stifle joint. The dog had undergone femoral head and neck osteotomy in the right pelvic limb one month prior to referral at a local hospital. Based on physical and neurological examinations, peripheral nerve injury of the right pelvic limb was suspected. Radiography showed irregular bony proliferation around the excised femoral neck. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed sciatic nerve injury with inconspicuous continuity at the greater trochanter level. A sciatic nerve neurotmesis was suspected and surgical repair was decided. During surgery, non-viable tissue of the sciatic nerve was debrided, and epineural neurorrhaphy was performed to bridge a large, 20-mm defect. The superficial and deep pain perception was progressively improved and restored at 3 weeks postoperatively, and the dog exhibited a gradual improvement in motor function. At 10 weeks postoperatively, the dog showed no neurological deficit including knuckling but the tarsal joint hyperextension did not improve due to ankylosis. The dog had undergone tarsal arthrodesis and exhibited almost normal limb function without any neurologic sequela until the last follow-up at 2.5 years postoperatively.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9324001
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-93240012022-07-27 Epineural Neurorrhaphy of a Large Nerve Defect Due to IatroGenic Sciatic Nerve Injury in a Maltese Dog Lee, Hanjung Lee, Haebeom Lee, Keyyeon Roh, Yoonho Jeong, Seongmok Kim, Daehyun Jeong, Jaemin Vet Sci Case Report SIMPLE SUMMARY: Sciatic nerve injury could occur due to mistake of surgery and called as ‘iatrogenic injury’. This type of injury is rare in dogs. Historically, this injury is treated through physiotherapy. However, if the nerve is completely transected, surgery such as nerve repair could be addressed. Unfortunately, if there is a large gap between transected sciatic nerve, it is very difficult to treat. Sometimes amputation is recommended because of permanent problem with dog’s hind leg. By the way, it is not known how long the gap can be treated in dogs before the important decision of whether to amputate the leg or not. Therefore, we would like to described a good result of treating an iatrogenic sciatic nerve injury with a large defect measuring 20 mm in length in a small Maltese dog. The dog suffered nerve injury after hip joint surgery and could not be walking himself for 2 months. So, we decided to treat him by nerve repair despite of large gap. Sensation and walking function of his hind leg was recovered almost completely after 2.5 years. Although sciatic nerve injury with large gap is a concern, it could be treated through surgery, even in small Maltese. ABSTRACT: Epineural neurorrhaphy is a standard nerve repair method, but it is rarely reported in veterinary literature. Epineural neurorrhaphy in canine sciatic nerve injury are described in this report. An 11-month-old, castrated male Maltese dog, presented with an one-month history of non-weight bearing lameness and knuckling of the right pelvic limb. The dog showed absence of superficial and deep pain perception on the dorsal and lateral surfaces below the stifle joint. The dog had undergone femoral head and neck osteotomy in the right pelvic limb one month prior to referral at a local hospital. Based on physical and neurological examinations, peripheral nerve injury of the right pelvic limb was suspected. Radiography showed irregular bony proliferation around the excised femoral neck. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed sciatic nerve injury with inconspicuous continuity at the greater trochanter level. A sciatic nerve neurotmesis was suspected and surgical repair was decided. During surgery, non-viable tissue of the sciatic nerve was debrided, and epineural neurorrhaphy was performed to bridge a large, 20-mm defect. The superficial and deep pain perception was progressively improved and restored at 3 weeks postoperatively, and the dog exhibited a gradual improvement in motor function. At 10 weeks postoperatively, the dog showed no neurological deficit including knuckling but the tarsal joint hyperextension did not improve due to ankylosis. The dog had undergone tarsal arthrodesis and exhibited almost normal limb function without any neurologic sequela until the last follow-up at 2.5 years postoperatively. MDPI 2022-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9324001/ /pubmed/35878378 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci9070361 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Case Report
Lee, Hanjung
Lee, Haebeom
Lee, Keyyeon
Roh, Yoonho
Jeong, Seongmok
Kim, Daehyun
Jeong, Jaemin
Epineural Neurorrhaphy of a Large Nerve Defect Due to IatroGenic Sciatic Nerve Injury in a Maltese Dog
title Epineural Neurorrhaphy of a Large Nerve Defect Due to IatroGenic Sciatic Nerve Injury in a Maltese Dog
title_full Epineural Neurorrhaphy of a Large Nerve Defect Due to IatroGenic Sciatic Nerve Injury in a Maltese Dog
title_fullStr Epineural Neurorrhaphy of a Large Nerve Defect Due to IatroGenic Sciatic Nerve Injury in a Maltese Dog
title_full_unstemmed Epineural Neurorrhaphy of a Large Nerve Defect Due to IatroGenic Sciatic Nerve Injury in a Maltese Dog
title_short Epineural Neurorrhaphy of a Large Nerve Defect Due to IatroGenic Sciatic Nerve Injury in a Maltese Dog
title_sort epineural neurorrhaphy of a large nerve defect due to iatrogenic sciatic nerve injury in a maltese dog
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9324001/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35878378
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci9070361
work_keys_str_mv AT leehanjung epineuralneurorrhaphyofalargenervedefectduetoiatrogenicsciaticnerveinjuryinamaltesedog
AT leehaebeom epineuralneurorrhaphyofalargenervedefectduetoiatrogenicsciaticnerveinjuryinamaltesedog
AT leekeyyeon epineuralneurorrhaphyofalargenervedefectduetoiatrogenicsciaticnerveinjuryinamaltesedog
AT rohyoonho epineuralneurorrhaphyofalargenervedefectduetoiatrogenicsciaticnerveinjuryinamaltesedog
AT jeongseongmok epineuralneurorrhaphyofalargenervedefectduetoiatrogenicsciaticnerveinjuryinamaltesedog
AT kimdaehyun epineuralneurorrhaphyofalargenervedefectduetoiatrogenicsciaticnerveinjuryinamaltesedog
AT jeongjaemin epineuralneurorrhaphyofalargenervedefectduetoiatrogenicsciaticnerveinjuryinamaltesedog