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Defining a safe corridor for trans-iliac pin placement in cats

Garcia-Pertierra, S; Meeson, RL; Yeung, BCY; Bedford, G; Pead, MJ

Authors

S Garcia-Pertierra

RL Meeson

BCY Yeung

G Bedford

MJ Pead



Abstract

Objective To identify whether a theoretical predictable safe corridor is available in cats for placement of trans-iliac pins without the use of fluoroscopy. Methods Twenty-one cats with straight orthogonal normal pelvic radiographs were included. Two start points were evaluated: a midpoint and a dorsal point. The midpoint was defined as midway between the dorsal lamina of the sacral vertebral canal and the cranial dorsal iliac spine. The dorsal start point was 2 mm ventral to the cranial dorsal iliac spine. The pin was assumed to be driven at 90 degrees to the lateral face of the ilium, and considered surgeon accuracy was +/- 4 degrees from the perpendicular. The angular range and the distance between the iliac wings from the ventrodorsal radiograph were used to calculate the possible cross-sectional area and pin exit location if driven from one iliac wing to the other. The corridor was then evaluated for repeatability in six randomly selected cats. Results Vertebral foramina penetration risk was identified in some cats when using a 1.6 and 2 mm-diameter pin using the mid-iliac wing start point. The dorsal start point decreased the available pin placement area but reduced the risk of entering the hazardous zone for all pin sizes up to 2 mm. Conclusion and Relevance A theoretical defined safe corridor is available for trans-iliac pin placement in cats between 2.0 and 5.5 kg. A 1.2-mm pin is the safest if using the mid-iliac wing start point. A more dorsal start point can accommodate up to a 2.0-mm pin if correctly aligned to the sacrum.

Citation

Garcia-Pertierra, S., Meeson, R., Yeung, B., Bedford, G., & Pead, M. (2021). Defining a safe corridor for trans-iliac pin placement in cats. Australian Veterinary Journal, 99(6), 242-248. https://doi.org/10.1111/avj.13062

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 15, 2021
Publication Date 2021
Deposit Date Nov 25, 2021
Publicly Available Date Nov 25, 2021
Print ISSN 0005-0423
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 99
Issue 6
Pages 242-248
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/avj.13062
Keywords pelvis; sacroiliac fracture‐ luxation; safe corridor; trans‐ iliac bolt; trans‐ iliac pin; LAG SCREW FIXATION; BILATERAL SACROILIAC LUXATION; VENTRAL ABDOMINAL APPROACH; SURGICAL ANATOMY; STABILIZATION; FRACTURE; SEPARATION; DOGS
Public URL https://rvc-repository.worktribe.com/output/1552857

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