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Determination of the Mechanical Axis and Joint Orientation Lines in the Canine Humerus: A Radiographic Cadaveric Study
Author(s) -
Wood Mirae C.,
Fox Derek B.,
Tomlinson James L.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
veterinary surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.652
H-Index - 79
eISSN - 1532-950X
pISSN - 0161-3499
DOI - 10.1111/j.1532-950x.2014.12134.x
Subject(s) - medicine , cadaveric spasm , sagittal plane , elbow , humerus , cadaver , radiography , coronal plane , anatomy , orthodontics , orthopedic surgery , joint (building) , population , surgery , architectural engineering , environmental health , engineering
Objective To describe a radiographic method for determination of the mechanical axes and joint orientation lines in orthogonal planes for the canine humerus and establish a range of normal joint orientation angles in a population of large breed dogs. Study Design Radiographic study. Sample Population Humeri (n = 50) of skeletally mature, nonchondrodystrophic canine cadavers, weighing 20–40 kg with no evidence of orthopedic disease. Methods Mediolateral and craniocaudal digital radiographs were used to establish anatomic landmarks for determination of the mechanical axis in both frontal and sagittal planes, the joint orientation lines of both shoulder and elbow and measurement of the resulting mechanical lateral distal humeral angle (mLDHA) in the frontal plane, and the mechanical caudal proximal humeral angle (mCaPHA), and mechanical cranial distal humeral angle (mCrDHA) in the sagittal plane. Results Means (±SD) for the joint orientation angles were: mLDHA, 86.92 ± 1.24°, mCaPHA, 43.28 ± 5.44°, and mCrDHA, 71.86 ± 3.97°. The 95% CI ranges for the joint orientation angles were mLDHA, 86.58–87.86°, mCaPHA, 41.77–44.79°, and mCrDHA, 70.76°–72.96°. Conclusion A method for measurement of the mechanical axis and associated joint angles of the normal canine humerus in the frontal and sagittal planes was established and reference intervals reported. In the frontal plane, it was determined that the canine humerus is not perpendicular to the elbow joint; therefore, elbow mechanical axis deviation is normal and requires further assessment.