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Etiopathogenesis of Canine Cruciate Ligament Disease: A Scoping Review

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ANIMALS
卷 13, 期 2, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani13020187

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cruciate ligament rupture; cruciate ligament disease; dog; pathogenesis; scoping review

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The spontaneous rupture of the cranial cruciate ligament in dogs is a common veterinary orthopedic problem. The causes of this disease are largely unknown, making prevention and treatment challenging. Recent research has revealed a systemic, metabolic multifactorial disease background behind the disease, and it also showed an association between this disease in dogs and humans. Therefore, unraveling the enigma of spontaneous cruciate ligament disease is of great importance for the treatment of degenerative joint disease in both dogs and humans.
Simple Summary The spontaneous rupture of the cranial cruciate ligament in the stifle joints of dogs is one of the most common veterinary orthopedic problems. Largely unknown mechanisms progressively weaken intra-articular structures which eventually fail; joint instability, osteoarthritic changes, pain, and dysfunction are the sequels. In general, surgical treatment is recommended aiming at stabilizing the hypermobile joint by a variety of surgical methods. Despite much progress in rendering surgical treatment more efficient, osteoarthritic changes, although effectively mitigated by surgery, continue, and persist. Improved knowledge on the causes of joint and ligament degradation would aid prevention and treatment. This review focuses on papers contributing to knowledge of the causes, that is, on local and systemic features, and on articular inflammatory and degenerative changes. Based on recent work, a systemic, metabolic multifactorial disease background emerged, and a new, generally accepted term has been coined: canine cruciate ligament disease. Primary osteoarthritis and collagen degradation seem to be the underlying key features of cruciate ligament disease. Besides redefining the pathogenesis in the dog, these findings render the canine joint disease a potentially useful clinical animal model for human osteoarthritic diseases. Thus, trying to unravel the enigma of spontaneous cruciate ligament disease may benefit the treatment of both canine and human degenerative joint disease, in general. The spontaneous rupture of the cranial cruciate ligament in dogs remains a pathoetiologic puzzle. Despite much progress in research over the past years, the systemic and local mechanisms leading to ligament degeneration and structural failure remain largely obscure. This scoping review focuses on pathogenesis and aims at summarizing and interpreting today's knowledge on causes of canine cruciate ligament rupture, i.e., the multifactorial mechanisms leading to degenerative stifle joint disease with collagen matrix degeneration and structural failures. Thus, the initial view of traumatic ligament rupture, fostered by wear and tear, has clearly been replaced by a new concept of systemic processes linked to progressive degenerative joint disease and ligament failure; thus, the term cranial cruciate ligament disease has been coined and is generally accepted. In addition, cruciate ligament rupture in people shares some similarities with the lesion in dogs; therefore, the review also includes comparative studies. The methods used were based on the PRISMA-ScR model (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews).

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