Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
Our 8 mo. old Zoe had a little too much fun playing with other dogs at the park today. She wiped out hard and came up limping. Just got back from vet, who is 80% sure she has a partial tear in cruciate ligament. For now, she is on anti-inflammatory medicine and rest (no running, no stairs, no off-leash) until we reevaluate in 2 weeks.
Has anyone dealt with this in their doodles? Specifically puppies? We are hoping to avoid surgery, and at her age, surgery isn't an option yet anyway. She isn't finished growing. Hope to hear some who have encountered this and had successful recovery without surgery.
Thanks!
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Is Zoe a mini or standard? The reason that I ask is that the self repairs without surgery are normally more successful on smaller dogs. Our Lucy 82 lbs, had the CCL surgery (suture repair) a couple years ago. We played the resting game for quite a while and while she would get better she would then get lame again. The surgery and recovery is quite lengthly, but she is doing much better. We are worried about the other knee though as they say normally when one goes the other one will go as well. I still worry every time I let her out the door.
Zoe is a medium-- she's 30 lbs now, we expect she would max out between 30 and 35.
This is going back 14+ years but my golden retriever started favoring her back leg when she was around 3. We would rest her, and it would get better. But by the time she was 4 it got to the point that we knew we had to do something. She ended up having TPLO surgery due to a torn cruciate. It was truly a looong recovery period (3 months) but she was back to her old self and never had a problem after that. The surgeon said she would probably end up with arthritis but it never happened... in that knee. Her front legs got arthritis as she got older.
Hopefully you won't have to go through any of this. Zoe is young and hopefully it will heal on it's own.
Good luck
Thank you all for these responses. We are resting her for the next 8-12 weeks in hopes the scar tissue around the partial tear will provide enough support for her to get back to normal without surgery.
Yes we are going to take her to a good rehab place near us. That is good advice, thanks.
There seems to be a lot of controversy about whether electing conservative/non-surgical treatment in a partial tear actually increases the likelihood of arthritis. I've heard some surgeons say it does while others say it doesn't. And there are tons of conflicting pieces of information on the internet.
I'd be curious to hear any first hand experiences from people on the board.
I wanted to update this thread in hopes that it would be useful for anyone experiencing this down the road with their own doodles.
After 6 weeks of conservative treatment, Zoe had her followup today at the vet. The vet could not replicate the previous drawer test, which means the shin bone no longer moves in front of the thigh bone. This is progress. She also said she could feel no fluid in joint, and that the muscles in both legs felt equal. Of course this is subjective, but often times one leg gets noticeably atrophied, so this is also a good sign. We are going to continue to ease Zoe back into everything, but so far, so good.
After the injury, Zoe was putting weight on the leg 24 hours latter and acting normally. This leads me to believe the tear was only a partial tear, but I have no way of knowing. There was laxity in her knee and the "drawer test" was positive, meaning her joint wasn't stable as her shin could move in front of her knee. We kept her quiet. Only off leash inside our home, and even then if she started to get rowdy, we'd put her on a leash. No jumping, no stairs, no running to start. After about 2 weeks, we gradually started to increase the distance of her walks. We'd watch her closely each day we increased either the distance of walks or if we added in some neighborhood hills to see if any limping, reluctance to get up or other signs pointed to her being in pain. Over the last week or so, we added in a couple of stairs for her to do and have moved back to her normal walking distance. We get her up to a trot, but not full on running yet. So far so good.
If it's helpful for anyone who might come across this thread, we followed this website's instructions almost to a T. I found the entire website very informative about doggie CCLs and ACLs. http://tiggerpoz.com/id3.html
Fingers crossed it continues to go well and we are able to avoid surgery.
This is very good news, Paul. Zoe is lucky to have such devoted and dedicated owners.
It would be very helpful to have this information in the Health Group as well as here in the main forum. Do you think you could post it in a discussion there? Maybe call it "Conservative Treatment for a Cruciate Ligament Tear" and post the most recent info that you just posted above, with a link to this discussion. Or however you want to do it.
sure thing!
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