The objective of this study was to determine if intraarticular pressure, elastance of the soft tissue forming the dorsal pouch, and range of motion in flexion measurements are significantly different in Thoroughbred metacarpophalangeal joints with clinical evidence of idiopathic synovitis, primary synovitis, synovitis/ capsulitis, or osteoarthritis relative to clinically normal joints. Forty-two metacarpophalangeal joints, in 25 active or retired Thoroughbred racehorses, were categorised by palpation and visual inspection of the palmar pouch into one of 4 increasing grades of distention. Intra-articular pressures were then measured using 2 pressure transducers attached to 22-gauge needles from both the dorsal and palmar pouches simultaneously while the horses stood squarely under mild sedation. After obtaining baseline pressure measurements, a third needle was inserted into the dorsal pouch, and 0.5 ml increments of saline solution were added every 10 s to perform a pressure/volume (elastance) study of the dorsal pouch. The elastance study for each joint ended when leakage into the palmar pouch was detected by the pressure transducer placed in that region. A lateral radiographic view was taken of each metacarpophalangeal joint in maximal flexion. The maximum angle of flexion was measured from the radiograph, and this angle was subtracted from 180" to acquire the range of motion in flexion.In this study, all Thoroughbreds with clinical evidence of lameness and/or sensitivity to flexion, referable to the metacarpophalangeal joint region, had fluid distention of the palmar pouch (grade 2 or 3 distention). The 16 metacarpophalangeal joints with no clinical abnormalities had a mean palmar pouch pressure of -1.25 mmHg. Joints afflicted with synovitislcapsulitis had the highest intraarticular pressures (mean +51.00 mmHg); however, joints with idiopathic synovitis (mean +15.71 mmHg), primary synovitis (mean +28.33 mmHg) and osteoarthritis (mean +26.20 mmHg) also had significantly elevated intraarticular pressures relative to the clinically normal group. Thoroughbred metacarpophalangeal joints diagnosed with *Present address: Department of Large Animal Surgery, Norwegian Veterinary College, Postbox 8146 Dep. 0033 Oslo, Norway. synovitis/capsulitis, or osteoarthritis, had significantly increased elastance (stiffness) of the soft tissue forming the dorsal pouch relative to the normal group and, probably, as a result significantly decreased range of motion in flexion. The presence of primary synovitis alone did not have a significant immediate effect on elastance of the dorsal pouch and range of motion in flexion. The 16 Thoroughbred metacarpophalangeal joints assessed as having no clinical abnormalities had a mean range of motion in flexion of 60.81". The mean range of motion in flexion of Thoroughbred metacarpophalangeal joints with a clinical diagnosis of primary synovitis was 53.67"; idiopathic synovitis 52.14'; synovitislcapsulitis 44.20'; and those with radiographic evidence of moderate to marked osteoarthritis 30.80'....
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Esophagotomies were performed on 36 dogs and closed with 3-0 polydioxanone in double-layer simple interrupted, single-layer simple interrupted, or single-layer simple continuous patterns. The operative time was shortest for single-layer simple continuous closure, followed by single-layer simple interrupted and double-layer simple interrupted, respectively. Three dogs with each suture pattern were euthanatized at hours 0 and 1, and days 4 and 28 after surgery. The esophagotomy incisions were subjected to bursting strength testing and examined microscopically. The bursting wall tension was higher for all three suture pattern groups at 28 days than at 0 and 1 hour. The double-layer closure had higher bursting wall tension than the single-layer closures at 0 hour and 4 days. Single-layer simple continuous closure had the lowest bursting wall tension for each time period. Single-layer simple interrupted closure had the highest bursting wall tension at 28 days. Microscopic examination revealed close approximation of tissue planes for the double-layer closure and mucosal eversion for the simple interrupted and simple continuous single-layer closures. Healing was superior histologically with the double-layer closure.
Colonic anastomoses were performed on two groups of 13 dogs each. Epidural anesthesia and general anesthesia were performed in one group and general anesthesia only in the other. Intraoperatively, the epidural-general anesthesia dogs tended to bleed less, making the anastomosis less difficult. Histologic comparisons showed healing to be more advanced in the epidural-general anesthesia dogs compared to the general anesthesia dogs 24 hours and 7 days postoperatively. Differences were not noticed 14 and 28 days postoperatively. Bursting pressures were determined 24 hours after surgery. Differences between the groups were not noticed. Leakage occurred at 72% of the pressure determined to cause leakage in normal colons.
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