Page 379 - Equine Clinical Medicine, Surgery and Reproduction, 2nd Edition
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354                                        CHAPTER 1



  VetBooks.ir  1.701                                      1.702





















                                                          Figs. 1.701–1.703  (1.701) Transverse scan at the
                                                          level of the crurotarsal joint, dorsal aspect. The tibialis
                                                          cranialis tendon has been severed over the distal
                                                          tarsus, the proximal end has retracted proximally,
                                                          leaving an abnormal void, filled with fluid, within the
           1.703                                          tendon sheath (red arrow). The synovial membrane is
                                                          thickened, forming villous masses. Some amorphous
                                                          tissue remains (yellow arrows) in contact with the
                                                          intact, although heterogeneous, peroneus tertius tendon
                                                          (arrowhead). (1.702) Longitudinal scan (proximal to
                                                          the left) at the distal crus level. The proximal end of
                                                          the torn tibialis cranialis tendon (TCT) is displaced
                                                          proximally, leaving a large, fluid-filled void within the
                                                          tarsal tendon sheath (sh). The frayed end of the tendon
                                                          is enlarged like a cauliflower (arrow). The underlying
                                                          peroneus tertius tendon (PT) is very heterogeneous.
                                                          (1.703) Transverse scan further distally (mid-tarsus): the
                                                          frayed distal end of the tibialis cranialis tendon (arrows)
                                                          is enlarged and hypoechogenic, the torn fibres being
                                                          mixed with granulation and haemorrhagic tissue. The
                                                          peroneus tertius tendon (arrowhead) remains intact
                                                          although irregular. Note the severely thickened synovial
                                                          membrane filling most of the sheath cavity.




           The space between the severed ends is hypoecho-  areas forming clefts or wedges in the tendon paren-
           genic and amorphous due to haematoma formation.   chyma. The tendon is always enlarged and irregular.
           It may contain fluid organised in geometric cavi-  Septic tenosynovitis is characterised ultrasono-
           ties, separated by thin strands of echogenic tissue   graphically by severe synovial changes, heteroge-
           (organised haematoma). With time, granulation   neous lesions that may extend into the tendon and
           tissue develops and there is a gradual increase in   distension of the sheath cavity by heterogeneous
           echogenicity as fibrosis takes place. Tears may occur   ‘cellular’ material representing exudate, fibrin and
           spontaneously and appear as focal, hypoechogenic   debris (Fig. 1.704). A fistula extending from the
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