Abstract

The canine elbow joint is a complex joint, whose musculoskeletal anatomy is well investigated. During the last 30 years kinematic analysis has gained importance in veterinary research and kinematics of the healthy and medial coronoid disease affected canine elbow joint are progressively investigated. Video-kinematographic analysis represents the most commonly used technique and multiple studies have investigated the range of motion, angular velocity, duration of swing and stance phase, stride length and other kinematic parameters, mostly in the sagittal plane only. However, this technique is more error-prone and data gained by video-kinematography represent the kinematics of the whole limb including the soft tissue envelope. A more precise evaluation of the in vivo bone and joint movement can only been achieved using fluoroscopic kinematography. Based on recent studies significant differences in the motion pattern between healthy joints and elbows with medial coronoid disease could be detected. Thereby not only adaptive changes, caused by pain and lameness, could be described, but primary changes in the micromotion of the joint forming bones could be found, which potentially represent new factors in the pathogenesis of medial coronoid disease. This chapter gives a review of current literature on elbow joint kinematics, with particular focus onto pathologic biomechanics in dysplastic canine elbows.

Highlights

  • The canine elbow joint is a complex joint, whose musculoskeletal anatomy is well investigated

  • The canine elbow joint is composed of the humerus proximally and the radius and ulna distally, and can be divided into three joint compartments: the Updates on Veterinary Anatomy and Physiology humero-ulnar, humero-radial and proximal radio-ulnar joint [1, 2]

  • Most studies on elbow joint kinematics are based on video-kinematographic analysis and have investigated the motion of the elbow only in the sagittal plane [43–45, 47–53, 55–59, 62, 63, 65, 68, 69]

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Summary

Introduction

The canine elbow joint is a complex joint, whose musculoskeletal anatomy is well investigated. The in vivo function of the elbow joint, the individual movement of the humerus, radius and ulna relative to each other and the load distribution within the joint is still subject of present and future research. Pathophysiological motion of the elbow joint, leading to a mechanical overload of certain joint compartments, is not well understood and an interesting field of present veterinary research. Canine developmental elbow disease (DED), in particular medial coronoid disease (MCD), is one of the most common reasons for forelimb lameness in the dog and this topic has academic, and clinical relevance

Anatomical basics
Kinematic analysis
The healthy elbow joint
The dysplastic elbow joint
Joint contact areas and force distribution within the elbow joint
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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