Is TPLO Cruciate Surgery The Answer For My Dog?

Ron Hines DVM PhD

  Portal to all of Dr. Hines’ animal health care articles

   Portal to donation page for devices that don’t display it

  Back to Anterior Cruciate Ligament Problems 

  My choice in surgical knee procedures here and here

 Perhaps.

 TPLO stands for tibial-plateau-leveling osteotomy. The photo from Wikipedia shows one of the plates and the six screws that anchor it in place to maintain an angle between your dogs femur and tibia that minimum forward thrust when the pet’s stifle (knee) joint is flexed. It is call an intracapsular technique because it requires actually entering the joint itself. The other option is an extracapsular technique which attempts to strengthen the knee with additional artificial ligaments without entering the knee joint itself. Extracapsular techniques do not radically change angles within the joint. But they are considerably less traumatic. Neither of them have been documented to halt the progress of knee arthritis. If they slow that process has not been determined. 

 But first I want to let you know something that is not that widely discussed. Orthopedic surgeons of all stripes, human and animal, tend to overstate their success rates. It is not a form of deception. It is just basic human nature to want to succeed, present good news and maintain an optimistic attitude in one’s chosen profession. Optimism increases wellbeing, contributes to mental and physical health, and supports productivity and motivation. In that characteristic, veterinary surgeons are no different from anyone else. (read here  & here)

Studies in human medicine also found overstatement of success rates as high as 35%. (read here & here)  In veterinary medicine a similar bias toward claims of surgical success occurs for the same reasons. Because pets can’t contradict their surgeon’s conclusions, success rate bias among veterinarians is probably even higher. No one I know of has spent time sorting this out when it comes to knee surgery in dogs. But it is a particularly common problem in human surgery that involves the knee. Knee pain is exceedingly difficult to quantify – even in us humans that can talk for ourselves. With us humans, patients want to feel better. Patients are motivated to feel better after interventions, and they generally do – at least for a while. The surgeons also would like to make them better and both together can tilt the table in favor of reporting marvelous recovery and attribute it to whatever was done. It is probably no different when it comes to pet owners and pet surgeries. Your dog is exceedingly good at reading your emotions. When you are content, it is likely to feel content. When you are worried and down about its health, it senses that too. I believe that is why placebos seem to work just as well when veterinarians give them to dogs as when physicians give them to people. The placebo effect is not imagined, it has a confirmed ability to lessen pain. There is also the problem of publication and report bias. That is, a veterinary surgeon is more likely to publish an article or present a report at a meeting when he/she thinks that a surgery they performed was helpful. One is much less likely to report things when they didn’t work well or when they were no better than they way it was done before. Cultivating a successful image is very important for a successful career, a feeling of self-worth, honor among one’s peers, veterinary school tenure, and economic security all come into play. Many joint and muscle problems get better with rest and physiotherapy. Knee surgery is often followed by rest and physiotherapy. Just about any surgery to the flexible structures that surround the knee causes scarring that reduces instability. So, you may never really know what caused the improvement. I am not telling you that every dog’s cruciate problem is going to get better with conservative non-surgical treatment. But a lot of them are. Recovery may not be 100%. However, it is not going to be 100% after surgery either. There are no unbiased statistics that show that surgery is any better than rest and physiotherapy for the management of cruciate ligament damage in dogs. (see here)  There isn’t much data to show that it is any better for people either. (read here

Dear reader, Besides your donations, visitors to the products that Google and others display on my website are what help me defray the cost of keeping my articles on the Web – and you informed. As you know, sites like mine that intentionally use no AI, no SEO, and are not written to Sell You Things are getting harder and harder to find, Best wishes, Ron Hines

Exit mobile version