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Topic:Prosthesis

Prostheses in horses refer to artificial devices designed to replace or support a missing or impaired limb or body part. These devices are used in equine medicine to enhance mobility and quality of life for horses with limb loss or severe injury. Equine prostheses can be custom-fitted and are typically made from durable materials that accommodate the horse's weight and activity level. They are employed in cases where traditional medical treatments are insufficient, and they can assist in rehabilitation and improve functional outcomes. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the development, application, and outcomes of prosthetic use in equine patients.
On-site testing of sutured organs: An experimental set up to cyclically tighten sutures.
Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials    May 1, 2020   Volume 109 103803 doi: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2020.103803
Pascoletti G, Pressanto MC, Putame G, Terzini M, Audenino AL, Zanetti EM.A number of surgical practices are aimed to compensate for tissue relaxation or weakened/atrophied muscles by means of suture prostheses/thread lifts. The success rate of these procedures is often very good in the short term, while it is quite variable among subjects and techniques in the middle-long term. Middle-long term failures are mostly related to suture distraction, loosening or wear, coming from repeated loading cycles. In this work, an experimental device to perform ex vivo tests on prosthetic sutures has been set up. An equine laryngoplasty has been used as a benchmark, being represe...
Successful Treatment of a Persistent Oroantral Fistula via Transbuccal and Transnasal Endoscopic Debridement in a Horse.
Journal of veterinary dentistry    March 1, 2018   Volume 35, Issue 1 28-34 doi: 10.1177/0898756418754316
Nottrott K, Guio C, Schramme M.We report an unusual case of a young Quarter Horse with a large dental fracture fragment displaced into the maxillary sinus, leaving an oroantral communication that caused food impaction and metaplastic calcification in the sinus and facial deformation with cutaneous fistulation. Oral extraction of a remaining tooth fragment from its alveolus was succeeded by a maxillary sinusotomy for removal of the abnormal sinus contents. Since the oroantral fistula did not heal spontaneously following the placement of a silicone dental prosthesis, minimally invasive transbuccal and transnasal endoscopic ap...
Experimental investigation of the biomechanics of urethral tissues and structures.
Experimental physiology    March 24, 2016   Volume 101, Issue 5 641-656 doi: 10.1113/EP085476
Natali AN, Carniel EL, Frigo A, Pavan PG, Todros S, Pachera P, Fontanella CG, Rubini A, Cavicchioli L, Avital Y, De Benedictis GM.What is the central question of this study? Prostheses for treatment of urinary incontinence elicit complications associated with an inadequate mechanical action. This investigation aimed to define a procedure addressed to urethral mechanical characterization. Experimental tests are the basis for constitutive formulation, with a view to numerical modelling for investigation of the interaction between the tissues and a prosthesis. What is the main finding and its importance? Horse urethra, selected for its histomorphometric similarity to human urethra, was characterized by integrated histologic...
Ex Vivo Mechanical Evaluation of a Sternal ZipFix(®) Implant for Prosthetic Laryngoplasty in Horses.
Veterinary surgery : VS    March 24, 2016   Volume 45, Issue 4 450-455 doi: 10.1111/vsu.12466
Markwell HJ, Mueller PO.To evaluate the properties of a ZipFix(®) (ZipFix) implant in equine laryngeal cartilages. Methods: Ex vivo biomechanical study. Methods: Equine arytenoid (n=36) and cricoid cartilages (n=18). Methods: Suture bites were placed in arytenoid or cricoid cartilages using a ZipFix(®) implant or a single strand of USP 5 braided polyester (TiCron™), and arytenoid and cricoid cartilages were separately subjected to single load to failure (25 N preload) or cyclic loading for 1,000 cycles, followed by single load to failure. Load, distraction, and stiffness were recorded. Results: Four arytenoid-Zip...
In vitro mechanical testing of braided polyurethane elastic fiber and braided polyester for equine laryngoplasty.
Veterinary surgery : VS    June 5, 2014   Volume 44, Issue 2 223-230 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950X.2014.12184.x
Willsallen H, Heller J, Kark L, Hilbert BJ.In vitro comparison of the mechanical properties of braided polyurethane elastomer (Lycra®) and braided polyester (Ethibond™) (1) when inserted into the muscular process of the arytenoid cartilage and (2) as suture loops. Methods: Experimental. Methods: Equine cadaver larynges (n = 15). Methods: The muscular processes (n = 30) of the arytenoid cartilages were dissected from each larynx and embedded in a resin base. Lycra® and Ethibond™ prostheses were randomly allocated to the left or right muscular process and each underwent cyclic fatigue (25-50 N) followed by load-to-failure...
Effect of age and prostheses location on rima glottidis area in equine cadaveric larynges.
Veterinary surgery : VS    February 22, 2013   Volume 42, Issue 3 286-290 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950X.2013.01101.x
Bischofberger AS, Hadidane I, Wereszka MM, Perkins NR, Jeffcott LB, Dart AJ.To determine the effect of horse age and laryngeal prosthesis location on rima glottidis area in cadaveric larynges. Methods: Experimental study. Methods: Cadaveric equine larynges (n = 40). Methods: Specimens were grouped by age: group 1, ≤5 years (n = 18); group 2, >5 to ≤10 years (n = 12); group 3, >10 years (n = 10). A cranial prosthesis was placed through the dorsal cricoid spine at 70% of the distance of the total cricoid length measured from the caudal rim. A dorsal prosthesis was placed through the caudal rim of the cricoid on the dorsal midline. A lateral prosthesis was plac...
Endovascular aortic stent graft infection with Streptococcus equi: the first documented case.
Vascular    July 29, 2011   Volume 21, Issue 1 14-16 doi: 10.1258/vasc.2010.cr0258
Parmar J, Winterbottom A, Cooke F, Lever AM, Gaunt M.Streptococcus equi is a common equine infectious disease, but transmission to man is rare and confined to those who commonly come into close contact with horses. Similarly, prosthetic stent graft infection is a rare complication of endovascular aortic aneurysm repair. We describe the first reported case of aortic stent graft with S. equi occurring in a professional racehorse trainer. Clinical presentation, investigations, imaging and management of this case are described. In conclusion, clinicians should consider infection with rare organisms in patients with prosthetic implants who regularly ...
Laparoscopic mesh incisional hernioplasty in five horses.
Veterinary surgery : VS    July 4, 2009   Volume 38, Issue 3 318-325 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950X.2009.00511.x
Caron JP, Mehler SJ.To report a technique for incisional hernioplasty in horses using laparoscopic placement of a prosthetic mesh. Methods: Case series. Methods: Horses (n=5) with ventral median abdominal incisional hernia. Methods: A telescope and 2 instrument portals were established bilaterally, lateral to and distant from the hernia margins. After exposure of the internal rectus sheath by removal of retroperitoneal fat with endoscopic scissors and monopolar cautery, a prosthetic mesh was introduced into the abdomen and secured intraperitoneally using transfascial sutures with or without supplemental endoscopi...
In vitro model for testing novel implants for equine laryngoplasty.
Veterinary surgery : VS    January 13, 2009   Volume 37, Issue 6 588-593 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950X.2008.00424.x
Cheetham J, Witte TH, Soderholm LV, Hermanson JW, Ducharme NG.To develop an in vitro laryngeal model to mimic airflow and pressures experienced by horses at maximal exercise with which to test laryngoplasty techniques. Methods: Randomized complete block. Methods: Cadaveric equine larynges (n=10). Methods: Equine larynges were collected at necropsy and a bilateral prosthetic laryngoplasty suture was placed with #5 Fiberwire suture to achieve bilateral maximal arytenoid abduction. Each larynx was positioned in a flow chamber and subjected to static flow and dynamic flow cycling at 2 Hz. Tracheal pressure and flow, and pressure within the flow chamber were ...
Evaluation of periodontal changes following intra-alveolar prosthesis for maxillary cheek tooth extraction in ponies.
Journal of veterinary dentistry    August 19, 2007   Volume 24, Issue 2 77-84 doi: 10.1177/089875640702400202
Vlaminck LE, Steenhault M, Maes D, Huys L, Gasthuys F.This study investigated the placement of an intra-alveolar prosthesis of bone substitute on gingival/periodontal health in 5 ponies following repulsion of cheek teeth 108 and 208. In each pony, one randomly chosen alveolus was allowed to heal by second intention while the other was filled with a non-resorbable, biocompatible bone substitute. At 6, 12 and 24-months after surgery, both maxillary arches were evaluated for wear abnormalities and for gingival health using a periodontal scoring system. Recorded changes included development of overgrowths on mandibular cheek teeth, widening of maxill...
Radiographic evaluation of tooth drift after cheek tooth extraction and insertion of an intra-alveolar prosthesis in ponies.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    February 27, 2007   Volume 175, Issue 2 249-258 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2006.12.016
Vlaminck L, Hoegaerts M, Steenhaut M, Maes D, Saunders J, Gasthuys F.The aim of the study was to investigate post-extraction tooth drift in ponies and the influence of an intra-alveolar prosthesis. The maxillary 08 was bilaterally repulsed in five ponies under general anaesthesia. On one side the alveolus was left to granulate, and on the other a synthetic bone substitute prosthesis was fitted. Standard radiographic projections of the head were taken monthly during the first year and at 24 months post-operatively. Different cephalometric parameters were measured and statistically analyzed. Rostral and caudal drift were recognized in molar and premolar teeth, re...
Percutaneous aortic valve implantation retrograde from the femoral artery.
Circulation    February 6, 2006   Volume 113, Issue 6 842-850 doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.582882
Webb JG, Chandavimol M, Thompson CR, Ricci DR, Carere RG, Munt BI, Buller CE, Pasupati S, Lichtenstein S.Percutaneous aortic valve implantation by an antegrade transvenous approach has been described but is problematic. Retrograde prosthetic aortic valve implantation via the femoral artery has potential advantages. Percutaneous prosthetic aortic valve implantation via the femoral arterial approach is described and the initial experience reported. Results: The valve prosthesis is constructed from a stainless steel stent with an attached trileaflet equine pericardial valve and a fabric cuff. After routine aortic balloon valvuloplasty, a 22F or 24F sheath is advanced from the femoral artery to the a...
Evaluation of a canine cranial cruciate ligament repair system for use in equine laryngoplasty.
Veterinary surgery : VS    December 14, 2005   Volume 34, Issue 6 548-553 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950X.2005.00086.x
Scherzer S, Hainisch EK.To report the use of a nylon suture system (Canine Cranial Cruciate Ligament Repair System; Securos Inc Veterinary Orthopedics) as a prosthesis for equine laryngoplasty. Methods: Experimental and prospective clinical study. Methods: Cadaver specimens (n = 5) and 7 horses with left laryngeal hemiplegia. Methods: A commercially available monofilament nylon suture system was implanted as a laryngeal prosthesis. Arytenoid cartilage abduction was achieved with a tensioning device applied to the suture prosthesis during transnasal endoscopic observation. Suture fixation was achieved with crimping cl...
Laryngoplasty: a novel prosthesis.
Equine veterinary journal    February 8, 2000   Volume 32, Issue 1 5-6 doi: 10.2746/042516400777612026
Robertson JT.No abstract available
In vitro evaluation of a novel prosthesis for laryngoplasty of horses with recurrent laryngeal neuropathy.
Equine veterinary journal    February 8, 2000   Volume 32, Issue 1 43-46 doi: 10.2746/042516400777611991
Schumacher J, Wilson AM, Pardoe C, Easter JL.A prosthesis, composed of a steel cable and stress-reducing washers, was developed to prevent failure of laryngoplasty, a common treatment for horses affected by recurrent laryngeal neuropathy. Laryngoplasties were performed on 15 cadaveric larynges using a polyester suture on one side and the cable prosthesis on the other. Each prosthesis was distracted at a displacement rate of 20 mm/s using a servohydraulic materials testing machine until laryngoplasty failed. Distraction force and actuator displacement were recorded and analysed. All 15 laryngoplasties performed with a suture failed at the...
Total replacement of the metatarsophalangeal joint in the horse. A single pilot study.
The veterinary quarterly    January 1, 1996   Volume 18 Suppl 2 S90-S93 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1996.9694701
Stolk PW, de Waal Malefijt MC, Buma P, Barneveld A.In this paper the successful replacement of an equine metatarsophalangeal joint by a human total condylar knee prosthesis is reported. In the period of observation following implantation of the endoprosthesis the experimental animal showed almost no lameness when exercised at walk, bearing weight on the operated limb. Flexion and extension of the joint were markedly reduced. The clinical and histological observations clearly support further investigation into the equine metatarsophalangeal joint replacement by an endoprosthesis.
Application of polymeric N-acetyl-D-glucosamine (chitin) to veterinary practice.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    October 1, 1993   Volume 55, Issue 5 743-747 doi: 10.1292/jvms.55.743
Okamoto Y, Minami S, Matsuhashi A, Sashiwa H, Saimoto H, Shigemasa Y, Tanigawa T, Tanaka Y, Tokura S.The sponge-, cotton-, and flake-type remedies made of chitin (chitin-sponge, chitin-cotton, and chitin-flake, respectively), and non-woven fabric of polyester (NWF) composited with chitin (chitin-NWF) were applied to various types of trauma, abscess, surgical tissue defect and herniorrhaphy in 147 clinical cases including 72 dogs, 38 cows, 33 cats, 2 rabbits, one monkey and one horse. Chitin-sponge was applied in 30 cases as filling agent of surgical tissue defect, and in 25 cases of trauma, 31 cases of abscess as wound dressing or tissue defect filling agent. In 77 out of 86 cases (89.5%), go...
Suspensory apparatus prosthesis in the horse. Part 1: In vitro mechanical properties.
Veterinary surgery : VS    March 1, 1992   Volume 21, Issue 2 121-125 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1992.tb00028.x
Major MD, Grant BD, White KK, Ratzlaff MH, Gallina AM, Crawley GR.Mechanical properties of equine suspensory apparatus preparations and three braided synthetic prostheses were evaluated in vitro. Force versus displacement plots and failure modes were recorded from single load-to-failure testing in 18 cadaver limbs before and after replacement of each suspensory apparatus with a prosthesis. Mean load at failure, energy to failure, and stiffness values of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) prostheses were lower than those of the suspensory apparatus and aramid prosthesis. The PTFE prosthesis failed by elongation or rupture of the prosthesis. Mechanical properties ...
Suspensory apparatus prosthesis in the horse. Part 2: In vivo evaluation in a suspensory apparatus disruption model.
Veterinary surgery : VS    March 1, 1992   Volume 21, Issue 2 126-132 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1992.tb00030.x
Major MD, Grant BD, White KK, Ratzlaff MH, Gallina AM, Donati RM.The suspensory apparatus of one forelimb was surgically disrupted in six adult horses by transecting the distal sesamoidean ligaments. A double-braided prosthetic ligament made of aramid yarn was installed to support the flexor surface of the metacarpophalangeal joint. The prosthesis was routed through tunnels in the third metacarpal bone and proximal phalanx, and secured to bone with screws. Evaluation by radiography, synovial fluid analysis, cinematography, and dynamography was performed before surgery and at weeks 16 and 30. Supracondylar cortical lysis and periosteal proliferation were obs...
Intraocular silicone prostheses in a dog and a horse with corneal lacerations.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 15, 1990   Volume 196, Issue 4 617-619 
Riggs C, Whitley RD.Intraocular silicone prostheses were implanted in the eyes of a horse and a dog with traumatic corneal lacerations and protrusion of intraocular contents. Several months after surgery, the horse and dog were tolerating the intraocular prostheses, and the appearance was cosmetically acceptable. This contradicts earlier reports that have cited corneal disease as a contraindication for implantation of intraocular silicone prostheses.
Effects of age and prosthesis material on in vitro cartilage retention of laryngoplasty prostheses in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 1 114-117 
Dean PW, Nelson JK, Schumacher J.Cartilage retention strengths of laryngoplasty prostheses were compared in larynges of 2-, 3-, and 4-year-old horses, using doubled polyester and expanded polytetrafluoroethylene prostheses. Bilateral laryngoplasties were performed on each of 15 (seven 2-year-old, two 3-year-old, and six 4-year-old) larynges, which were collected at an abbatoir. Prostheses were secured to a mechanical testing machine, and tension causing arytenoid cartilage abduction was applied, until total failure of the cartilage or prosthesis resulted. Tension caused cricoid cartilage failure in 1 specimen, and muscular pr...
Silicone ocular prosthesis in horses: 11 cases (1983-1987).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1989   Volume 194, Issue 12 1764-1766 
Provost PJ, Ortenburger AI, Caron JP.Horses experience a number of ophthalmic diseases and injuries that may result in loss of function of the eye. In the treatment of end-stage ophthalmic disease or injury that precludes salvage of the eye, the use of an inert, silicone prosthetic implant is a cosmetic alternative to simple enucleation. Eleven horses treated either by enucleation and insertion of an intraorbital prosthesis (n = 9) or by evisceration and insertion of an intraocular prosthesis (n = 2) were evaluated for postoperative complications and for long-term cosmetic results. Of the 11 horses treated, complication rate was ...
Intraocular silicone prosthesis in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 1, 1988   Volume 193, Issue 3 343-345 
Meek LA.A 40-mm intraocular silicone prosthesis was placed in a horse's globe to control glaucoma. The glaucoma was suspected to be associated with a lens subluxation, but primary glaucoma could not be ruled out. Medical treatment and cyclocryotherapy had been attempted, but failed to decrease the intraocular pressure to a normal value. The prosthesis was placed, via a dorsal scleral incision, after removal of the intraocular contents. The size of the prosthesis was estimated from measurements of the horse's normal left globe and an enucleated, age-matched globe. Silicone prostheses offer a cosmetic a...
Assessment of the efficacy of an abductor muscle prosthesis for treatment of laryngeal hemiplegia in horses.
Australian veterinary journal    October 1, 1983   Volume 60, Issue 10 294-299 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1983.tb02812.x
Speirs VC, Bourke JM, Anderson GA.Four variations of abductor muscle prosthesis for treating laryngeal hemiplegia were evaluated in 153 horses by questionnaire, and in the 100 Thoroughbred racehorses in this group survival analysis was used to compare their racing performances and earnings with those of 400 control horses. The questionnaire indicated that the technique which included a ventriculectomy and 2 prostheses was regarded as being the most successful (P less than 0.01) and resulted in the least residual stertor (P less than 0.001). Survival analysis showed that there was no significant difference between the treated g...
An assessment of filamentous carbon fibre for the treatment of tendon injury in the horse.
The Veterinary record    March 8, 1980   Volume 106, Issue 10 217-221 doi: 10.1136/vr.106.10.217
Goodship AE, Brown PN, Yeats JJ, Jenkins DH, Silver IA.The results of an assessment of carbon fibre for biological use are given, with particular reference to the clinical use of the material in the treatment of equine tendon injury. Biocompatability of the fibres is assessed using fibroblast cell cultures and replacement of normal tendon with carbon fibre prostheses in experimental animals. The rationale and technique for using this material in clinical cases of tendon injury in the racehorse are described. Results are given from 62 implant operations in a limited series of 40 horses.
Amputation and use of a prosthesis.
Modern veterinary practice    November 1, 1977   Volume 58, Issue 11 933-934 
Zehr DR.No abstract available
Abductor muscle prostheses in the treatment of laryngeal hemiplegia in the horse.
Australian veterinary journal    May 1, 1972   Volume 48, Issue 5 251-254 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1972.tb05148.x
Speirs VC.No abstract available
Use of a prosthetic device for surgical correction of laryngeal hemiplegia in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 15, 1970   Volume 157, Issue 2 157-163 
Marks D, Mackay-Smith MP, Cushing LS, Leslie JA.No abstract available
Prosthesis for partially amputated foreleg in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1970   Volume 156, Issue 11 1600-1604 
Koger LM, McIlhattan J, Schladetzky R.No abstract available
Use of polypropylene mesh as a prosthetic material for abdominal hernias in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1969   Volume 155, Issue 10 1589-1594 
Johnson JH.No abstract available