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Comprehensive reference on all aspects of sports medicine and rehabilitation in dogs, presenting the latest research through a clinical approach
Grounded in the latest scientific literature, Canine Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation, Third Edition, presents the state of the art in sports medicine and rehabilitation in dogs, offering practical advice and strategies for examining, treating, and managing canine athletes, working dogs, and companion dogs. The book features more than 500 clinical photographs, radiographs, and line drawings throughout to demonstrate key concepts.
New chapters in this revised and updated Third Edition, including the work of 34 new authors, discuss the multimodal approach to managing osteoarthritis, interventional pain management, assistive devices, newly recognized issues specific to working dogs such as police and assistance dogs, the current status of the business of sports medicine and rehabilitation, and more. Chapters from the previous edition have been extensively revised to reflect the latest science.
Written by 57 leading international experts in the field, including 34 new authors, Canine Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation explores:
Canine Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation is an essential reference for veterinarians, physical therapists, veterinary technicians, and anyone interested in working with canine athletes or offering rehabilitation therapy in their practice, including sports medicine specialists and dog handlers.
The Editors
Chris Zink DVM PhD DACVP DACVSMR (Canine) CCRT CVSMT CVA is a past president of the American College of Veterinary Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation and CEO of Zink Integrative Sports Medicine.
Janet B. Van Dyke DVM DACVSMR (Canine) MANZCVS (VSMR) CCRT Member Australian New Zealand College of Veterinary Scientists (VSMR Chapter), CCRT, is a past president of the American Association of Rehabilitation Veterinarians and the Veterinary Orthopedic Society, CEO and founder of the Canine Rehabilitation Institute, and CEO of Van Dyke & Associates.
Chris Zink, DVM PhD DACVP DACVSMR (Canine) CCRT CVSMT CVA Brittany Jean Carr DVM DACVSMR (Canine) CCRT
Canine sports medicine and rehabilitation is one of the newest specialties in veterinary medicine. It encompasses and integrates a variety of fields, including orthopedics, exercise physiology, neurology, cardiology, pulmonology, nutrition, and others. Rehabilitation, which includes regaining and maintaining fitness as well as conditioning targeted with the goal of preventing future injury, is a critical partner with canine sports medicine. Canine athletes include dogs that compete in performance events as varied as agility trials, obedience trials, and disc dog competitions, as well as working dogs such as police/military dogs, search and rescue dogs, and assistance dogs for the disabled. Principles of canine sports medicine and rehabilitation apply to all active dogs, regardless of whether they train or compete; this comprises a large proportion of the canine population. Canine sports medicine and rehabilitation professionals play a pivotal role in helping canine athletes and working dogs recover after injury or illness. They work to prevent reinjury while moving the patient back to a state of muscular ability, endurance, coordination, balance, and flexibility that optimizes their physical abilities. Understanding the physical activities that are involved in different performance events and the jobs that working dogs perform is critical to devising targeted rehabilitation for sports/working dogs after injury or illness and retraining them to perform their specific duties. This is best accomplished by attending athletic/working dog training sessions and competitions. This chapter introduces the performance requirements for sporting and working dogs.
Humans and dogs have been partners for at least 33,000 years (Galibert et al., 2011; Ovodov et al., 2011; Thalmann et al., 2013; Shannon et al., 2015; Frantz et al., 2016; Wang et al., 2016). As working companions, dogs have assisted in hunting food, guarding family and property, gathering and moving livestock, patrolling with soldiers, detecting drugs and explosives, and searching for lost humans.
With increases in disposable income and a change in attitudes toward work/life balance, there has been an exponential growth in the number of sporting events devised by people to challenge their abilities to train dogs for competition. The field of canine sports medicine began with veterinarians working with racing Greyhounds and has grown over the decades, with veterinarians now working with dogs that participate in dozens, if not hundreds, of different canine sports and working roles.
Canine sports medicine is specifically concerned with injuries sustained by canine athletes, including their prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. The field of canine sports medicine comprises many different aspects of traditional and integrative veterinary medicine as well as nonclinical ancillary roles in canine care such as exercise physiology, athletic training, and others (Table 1.1) and encourages significant collaboration between veterinarians and others with expertise in a wide variety of complementary fields. In addition, canine sports medicine is intimately linked to canine rehabilitation, where veterinarians, physical therapists, and veterinary technicians work together to return injured canine athletes and working dogs not only to health but to optimal performance.
Table 1.1 Fields included in canine sports medicine
There are many advantages for veterinarians and rehabilitation professionals working with canine athletes and working dogs (Table 1.2). The field involves assisting clients who have invested significant time, emotion, effort, and finances into raising, training, and competing/working with their canine partners. These clients want the best care and the best outcomes for their dogs, so there is substantial opportunity to practice state-of-the-art sports and rehabilitation medicine.
Table 1.2 Canine sports medicine and rehabilitation advantages
Human athletes are assisted by teams of health professionals with diverse expertise who work on maintaining and regaining their health and fitness. Canine sports medicine and rehabilitation professionals likewise play a pivotal role in helping the owners/handlers of canine athletes and working dogs keep their dogs in athletic condition, prevent injury, and recover after injury or illness. They help move dogs back to a state of muscular ability, endurance, coordination, balance, and flexibility that allows them to optimize their respective functions.
Clients with canine athletes and working dogs are generally highly compliant. Once given detailed, individualized conditioning programs, clients will work with their dogs to perform those exercises diligently. This is a key to success for the canine sports medicine and rehabilitation professional and brings significant job satisfaction, allowing them to develop relationships with clients that last through generations of dogs.
Canine athletes and working dogs usually enter the rehabilitation program at a higher fitness plane than most inactive pet dogs. This provides the canine sports medicine and rehabilitation professional with the advantage and enjoyment of working with health more than with illness.
There is significant opportunity for research in the field of canine sports medicine and rehabilitation. Opportunities abound for retrospective studies of outcomes as well as prospective studies that formulate specific hypotheses and design test and control groups to address those hypotheses. Owners/handlers of canine athletes and working dogs are generally enthusiastic about participating in studies that will provide information they can use to become more efficient in training and more successful in either competition or their function as working dogs and that will result in greater health and longevity.
As an example of the investments that clients have in their dogs, an average annual cost to campaign a show dog in conformation shows is in the five- to six-figure range (Dugan & Dugan, 2011). This typically includes the costs of entries, travel to shows, advertising, and fees for professional handlers. Many clients with competitive field trial dogs will spend $25,000-$50,000/year to have professional handlers train and compete with their dogs. Most non-conformation competitors spend less than that because they generally train and compete with their own dogs. However, they do have significant costs for lessons, entries, and traveling, and many avid competitors will spend $10,000-$25,000/year on their chosen canine sport (Chris Zink, personal communication). This is concrete evidence of the significant temporal, financial, and emotional investment on the part of owners/handlers of canine athletes and working dogs. As a result, these clients are interested in obtaining the best possible care for their canine teammates. They look to canine sports medicine and rehabilitation professionals to help their dogs recover quickly and completely from injuries and to be able to once again compete or work to their fullest potential.
To be most effective, canine sports medicine and rehabilitation professionals must be as familiar as possible with the requirements for canine athletic and working dog activities. It also is important that they are familiar with terminology and training techniques used with these dogs. Training and practice methods can contribute to the types of injuries that performance and working dogs experience, sometimes more...
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