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Equine veterinary journal2005; 37(2); 166-171; doi: 10.2746/0425164054223813

Osteoarthritis of the talocalcaneal joint in 18 horses.

Abstract: Talocalcaneal osteoarthritis (TO) is an uncommon cause of moderate to severe hindlimb lameness, on which only isolated case reports have been published to date. Objective: To review the clinical features of TO and determine optimal methods for diagnosis, management and prognosis. Methods: The case records from 4 referral centres of 18 horses showing hindlimb lameness considered, as a result of clinical investigation, to be caused by TO, were reviewed. Results: TO affected mature sports and pleasure horses (age 7-16 years) and caused moderate to severe lameness, usually of sudden onset with no obvious inciting cause. There were few localising signs, other than worsening of lameness by hock flexion. Tarsocrural joint analgesia produced improvement in lameness in 6/11 horses (55%) and perineural analgesia of the tibial and fibular nerves complete soundness in 6/14 horses (43%) in which it was performed; 7/14 horses (50%) showed a further substantial improvement. Radiological findings included subchondral bone lysis and sclerosis and irregular joint space width, seen most obviously in a lateromedial view. Nuclear scintigraphy revealed marked uptake of radiopharmaceutical predominantly plantaromedially in the region of the talus in the 7 horses in which it was performed. Fourteen horses were treated conservatively with box- or pasture-rest, with or without intra-articular corticosteroids, hyaluronic acid or polysulphated glycosaminoglycan, and all remained lame. Intra-articular corticosteroids appeared to have no effect in any horse. Of 10 horses receiving conservative management only, 6 were subjected to euthanasia, 3 were retired and 1 remained in light work, but was still lame. Two horses treated by either partial tibial and fibular neurectomy or subchondral forage failed to regain soundness and were retired. Six horses were treated by surgical arthrodesis of the talocalcaneal joint with 2 or three 5.5 mm AO screws introduced obliquely across the joint from the plantarolateral aspect of the calcaneus, which resulted in improvement in lameness in all cases. Conclusions: Osteoarthritis of the talocalcaneal joint causes acute onset severe lameness, but clinical findings and diagnostic analgesia often fail to identify precisely the site of pain. Consistent radiographic changes suggested TO was contributing to the lameness and this diagnosis was supported by nuclear scintigraphy. The poor success of conservative treatment (including intra-articular medication) suggests that surgical arthrodesis is the treatment of choice, although the prognosis is still poor for a return to full soundness. Conclusions: The clinical features described should facilitate more accurate diagnosis and prognosis. A novel surgical treatment is described which appears to offer significant improvement in the lameness. Further work is necessary to determine the causes of this condition and more effective management.
Publication Date: 2005-03-23 PubMed ID: 15779631DOI: 10.2746/0425164054223813Google Scholar: Lookup
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  • Journal Article

Summary

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The article analyzes talocalcaneal osteoarthritis (TO), an uncommon cause of severe lameness in horses. It aims to establish effective methods for diagnosis and treatment of TO, noting that the current management strategies are largely unsuccessful. However, surgical arthrodesis (fusion of the affected joint) shows a promising reduction in symptoms.

Clinical features and methods of study

  • The researchers studied the data recorded from four animal healthcare centers, focusing on 18 horses that exhibited hindlimb lameness due to TO.
  • TO is usually characterized by an abrupt onset of extreme lameness with no discernible external cause predominately affecting sports and pleasure horses aged 7-16 years.
  • The primary symptom was deterioration of lameness due to hock flexion.

Diagnosis Observations

  • Analgia or pain relief in the tarsocrural joint improved lameness in 55% of horses, while analgesia of the tibial and fibular nerves produced total soundness in 43% of horses.
  • Radiological assessments revealed subchondral bone lysis (dissolution), sclerosis (hardening of tissue), and irregular joint spacing. Nuclear scintigraphy (a diagnostic imaging test) showed increased uptake of radiopharmaceuticals especially plantaromedially in the talus region of the horses.

Management and Prognosis

  • Conservative treatments like box- or pasture-rest, intra-articular corticosteroids, hyaluronic acid, or polysulphated glycosaminoglycan were not successful in treating TO as all horses remained lame.
  • Corticosteroids appeared to have no effect. Out of horses that received only conservative management, six were euthanized, three were retired and one continued with light work despite remaining lame.
  • Partial tibial and fibular neurectomy or subchondral forage treatments also unsuccessful; horses continued to be lame and were retired.
  • Six horses treated with surgical arthrodesis (fusion of a joint) showed significant improvement in lameness. The procedure involved the introduction of AO screws into the talocalcaneal joint.

Conclusions

  • TO causes severe lameness but it’s often tricky to exactly pinpoint the site of pain. Radiographic changes and nuclear scintigraphy supported the diagnosis of TO as the cause of lameness.
  • Conservative treatments were largely ineffective and surgical arthrodesis emerged as a preferred choice of treatment. However, prognosis remains poor for complete recovery to full soundness.
  • Further research is required to understand the causes of TO and find better management strategies.

Cite This Article

APA
Smith RK, Dyson SJ, Schramme MC, Head MJ, Payne RJ, Platt D, Walmsley J. (2005). Osteoarthritis of the talocalcaneal joint in 18 horses. Equine Vet J, 37(2), 166-171. https://doi.org/10.2746/0425164054223813

Publication

ISSN: 0425-1644
NlmUniqueID: 0173320
Country: United States
Language: English
Volume: 37
Issue: 2
Pages: 166-171

Researcher Affiliations

Smith, R K W
  • Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Royal Veterinary College, North Mymms, Hatfield, Hertfordshire AL9 7TA, UK.
Dyson, S J
    Schramme, M C
      Head, M J
        Payne, R J
          Platt, D
            Walmsley, J

              MeSH Terms

              • Animals
              • Female
              • Hindlimb
              • Horse Diseases / diagnosis
              • Horse Diseases / pathology
              • Horse Diseases / surgery
              • Horses
              • Lameness, Animal / diagnosis
              • Lameness, Animal / pathology
              • Lameness, Animal / surgery
              • Male
              • Osteoarthritis / diagnosis
              • Osteoarthritis / pathology
              • Osteoarthritis / surgery
              • Osteoarthritis / veterinary
              • Prognosis
              • Retrospective Studies
              • Treatment Outcome

              Citations

              This article has been cited 1 times.
              1. Espinosa-Mur P, Spriet M, Nogues MP, Cullen T, Galuppo LD. Medial malleolus fragmentation following talocalcaneal arthrodesis by a dorsomedial approach in a horse. Can Vet J 2021 Aug;62(8):861-866.
                pubmed: 34341600