Elbow

It should be considered a clinical disease distinct from dysplasia-related fragmentation
Medial compartment disease is not homogenous and pattern recognition may assist further investigation of etiopathogenesis
Dogs with medial compartment disease undergoing BODPUO showed clinical improvement in the 6 month follow-up
Arthroscopic treatment of medial coronoid disease, even with limited cartilage lesions, may not resolve lameness in some dogs
Cats with forelimb lameness should be evaluated for medial humeral epicondylitis, associated with free joint bodies and neurogenic myopathy
Computer recognition pattern analysis was up to 100% correct in identifying abnormal elbows and normal elbows, with the medial images most consistent
To the authors’ knowledge this is the first case report of a congenital radial head sub-luxation in a craniolateral direction in a dog and also one successfully managed with radial head ostectomy and radioulnar synostosis.
Due to irreversible loss of cartilage, the prognosis of the erosion of the medial compartment of the elbow joint remains guarded
Development of the condition was not related to any disturbance in the development of the antebrachia and elbow joints during the rapid growth phase in 14 Labrador Retrievers
There was no significant correlation between the clinical scores and histopathologic changes in 19 dogs