Abstract
Tenoscopy is the use of an arthroscope to access tendon sheaths. This article reports clinical findings, treatments, and outcomes of 33 horses with either septic or nonseptic digital tenosynovitis submitted to 36 tenoscopies during 34 occasions at the Marion duPont Scott Equine Medical Center (1997–2001). Two of the 16 horses with septic tenosynovitis were euthanized at the hospital. From the 32 horses discharged from the hospital, outcome was obtained in 31 cases: 12 horses (6 septic) could work at the same level. No difference was detected between the outcome groups regarding clinical and laboratory variables. In nonseptic cases, lameness grade, circulating white blood cells, and plasma fibrinogen before surgery were lower, while the period between the onset of clinical signs and surgery was longer and duration of phenylbutazone treatment and hospitalization was shorter. No difference in the outcome was detected when septic and nonseptic cases were compared. Tenoscopy was useful for diagnosis and treatment of nonseptic and septic digital tenosynovitis. The small number of cases and the lack of accurate information due to the retrospective nature of the study may have prevented detection of a difference between the outcomes of horses with septic versus nonseptic tenosynovitis.
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