Abstract

BackgroundThe presence of cranial tibial subluxation can aid in the detection of joint instability as a result of CrCL injury. Detection of cranial tibial subluxation has been described using the tibial compression test (TCT) and cranial drawer test (CDT); however, diagnosis of CrCL insufficiency by assessing cranial subluxation motion of the tibia is subjective and difficult to quantify accurately. The aim of this study was to investigate a measurement technique to assess the degree of cranial tibial displacement relative to the femoral condyles on mediolateral projection stifle radiographs at varying degrees of stifle flexion (90°, 110°, and 135°) in CrCL intact, partially, and completely transected conditions. Radiographic measurements included: CrCL length and intercondylar distance (ICD), defined as the distance between the tibial mechanical axis (TMA) and the femoral condylar axis (FCA). The influence of CrCL status, stifle flexion angle, and measurement type on measured distance was evaluated. The relationship between CrCL length and ICD measurement was also assessed.ResultsComplete transection of the CrCL resulted in significant cranial tibial displacement. Stifle flexion angle affected ICD, but not CrCL length. Normalized measured CrCL length and ICD were significantly different; however, no differences existed between the change in distance detected by CrCL length and ICD measurements as CrCL transection status changed. Correlation coefficients detected a significant positive correlation between measured CrCL and ICD.ConclusionThe ICD measurement technique was able to quantify tibial displacement at various stifle flexion angles in the intact and completely transected CrCL conditions. The ICD measurement was more affected by stifle flexion angle than was the CrCL length.

Highlights

  • The presence of cranial tibial subluxation can aid in the detection of joint instability as a result of cruciate ligament (CrCL) injury

  • The purpose of this study was to investigate a measurement technique for assessing the degree of cranial tibial displacement relative to the femoral condyles on mediolateral projection stifle radiographs at varying degrees of stifle flexion (90°, 110°, and 135°) in CrCL intact, partially, and completely transected conditions and comparing results of the investigational technique to the results obtained by measuring the length of the CrCL

  • Correlation between measurements Normalized measured CrCL length and intercondylar distance (ICD) were significantly different (Fig. 5); no differences existed between the change in distance detected by normalized CrCL measurement and normalized ICD as CrCL transection status changed from intact to partial and from partial to complete

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Summary

Introduction

The presence of cranial tibial subluxation can aid in the detection of joint instability as a result of CrCL injury. The aim of this study was to investigate a measurement technique to assess the degree of cranial tibial displacement relative to the femoral condyles on mediolateral projection stifle radiographs at varying degrees of stifle flexion (90°, 110°, and 135°) in CrCL intact, partially, and completely transected conditions. CrCL insufficiency leads to stifle instability, which results in cranial subluxation of the tibia relative to the femur during joint loading [3]. Transection of the craniomedial or caudolateral band of the CrCL has been shown to cause mild joint instability with ≤3 mm of cranial tibial translation with flexion of the stifle [7]

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