Background: feline physiotherapy is an emerging scope and field, which focusing on the therapeutic rehabilitation of cats. With growing awareness of feline physical health, it applies therapeutic techniques to manage pain, enhance mobility, and improve functional recovery from various injuries or surgeries. Aim: through structured rehabilitation techniques, the emerging field of feline physiotherapy aims to enhance a catâs mobility, strength, and quality of life. Method: this broad review looks at how well different types of physiotherapy, like electrotherapy, manual therapy, and targeted exercises, help with conditions like musculoskeletal disorders, neurological impairments, and mobility problems in older adults, as well as recovery from surgery total eight full text literature included in present review. Result: in current review it, indicate that when rehabilitation techniques are used correctly, there are big improvements in mobility, less pain, and better overall health. The evidence suggests that physiotherapy could be used in cat healthcare. Moreover, there would be a reduction in dependency on pharmaceutical interventions as well. Despite these promising outcomes, challenges such as unique anatomical structures and behavioural sensitivities make the administration of rehabilitation complex. There is but limited research on feline rehabilitation; thus, the need to identify focused studies increases to develop standardised treatment protocols. Conclusion: this paperâs focus on recent physiotherapy rehabilitation advances would help veterinary physiotherapists incorporate these methods into their practise.
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Baxter, G.D. and McDonough, S.M., 2007. Principles of electrotherapy in veterinary physiotherapy. In: McGowan, C., Goff, L. and Stubbs, N. (eds.) Animal physiotherapy: assessment, treatment and rehabilitation of animals. Blackwell, Oxford.
Can, P. and Coşkan, N., 2024. Physiotherapy and rehabilitation in geriatric dogs and cats. Turkish Journal of Veterinary Research 8(2): 151-162.
Canal, S., Rinaldi, V., Gerrits, L., Vignoli, M., Boari, A. and Crisi, P.E., 2024. Assessment of the quality of life of cats affected by paraparesis/paraplegia and urinary retention, and their impact on caregivers. Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery 26(10): 1098612X241275253.
Chen, Y.N. and Chi, C.C., 2023. Levels of evidence and study designs: a brief introduction to dermato-epidemiologic research methodology. Dermatologica Sinica 41: 199-205.
Colvero, A.C., Schwab, M.L., Ferrarin, D.A., Ripplinger, A., Wrzesinski, M.R., Rauber, J.D., Beckmann, D.V. and Mazzanti, A., 2021. Physical therapy modalities in the rehabilitation of cats (felis catus) with neurological and orthopedic conditions. CieÌncia Rural 52: e20200822.
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Goff, L., 2016. Physiotherapy assessment for animals. In: McGowan, C. and Goff, L. (eds.) Animal physiotherapy. 2nd ed. Wiley-Blackwell, West Sussex UK, pp. 171-196. Chapter 11.
Gouveia, D., Cardoso, A., Carvalho, C., Rijo, I., Almeida, A., Gamboa, OÌ., Lopes, B., Sousa, P., Coelho, A., Balça, M.M. and Salgado, A.J., 2024. The role of early rehabilitation and functional electrical stimulation in rehabilitation for cats with partial traumatic brachial plexus injury: a pilot study on domestic cats in Portugal. Animals 14(2): 323.
Levac, D., Colquhoun, H. and OâBrien, K.K., 2010. Scoping studies: advancing the methodology. Implementation Science 5: 69.
Mahaseth, P.K. and Raghul, S., 2021. Veterinary physiotherapy â a literature review. International Journal of Science and Healthcare Research 6: 288-294.
McGowan, C., Goff, L. and Stubbs, N., 2016. Animal physiotherapy: assessment, treatment and rehabilitation of animals. 2nd ed. Wiley-Blackwell.
Meeson, R.L. and Strickland, R., 2021. Traumatic joint luxations in cats: reduce, repair, replace, remove. Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery 23(1): 17-32.
Mertens, A.M., Schenk, H.C. and Volk, H.A., 2023. Current definition, diagnosis, and treatment of canine and feline idiopathic vestibular syndrome. Frontiers in Veterinary Science 10: 1263976.
Millis, D.L. and Levine, D., 2014. Canine rehabilitation and physical therapy. 2nd ed. Elsevier, St. Louis, MO.
Mitchell, D. and Hart, P., 2023. Ultrasound therapy in chronic arthritis management in cats. The Journal of Veterinary Medical Science 20(4): 74-82.
Ramos, S., Clark, T. and Bennett, R., 2022. Cryotherapy for acute injuries in felines: efficacy and challenges. Veterinary Cold Therapy Science 8(2): 203-209.
Zurita, M. and Craig, A., 2022. Feline diaphyseal fractures: management and treatment options. Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery 24(7): 662-674.
| å ¨é¨æé´ | è¿å»ä¸å¹´ | è¿å»30天 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| æè¦æµè§æ¬¡æ° | 611 | 611 | 47 |
| å ¨ææµè§æ¬¡æ° | 33 | 33 | 0 |
| PDFä¸è½½æ¬¡æ° | 179 | 179 | 0 |
Background: feline physiotherapy is an emerging scope and field, which focusing on the therapeutic rehabilitation of cats. With growing awareness of feline physical health, it applies therapeutic techniques to manage pain, enhance mobility, and improve functional recovery from various injuries or surgeries. Aim: through structured rehabilitation techniques, the emerging field of feline physiotherapy aims to enhance a catâs mobility, strength, and quality of life. Method: this broad review looks at how well different types of physiotherapy, like electrotherapy, manual therapy, and targeted exercises, help with conditions like musculoskeletal disorders, neurological impairments, and mobility problems in older adults, as well as recovery from surgery total eight full text literature included in present review. Result: in current review it, indicate that when rehabilitation techniques are used correctly, there are big improvements in mobility, less pain, and better overall health. The evidence suggests that physiotherapy could be used in cat healthcare. Moreover, there would be a reduction in dependency on pharmaceutical interventions as well. Despite these promising outcomes, challenges such as unique anatomical structures and behavioural sensitivities make the administration of rehabilitation complex. There is but limited research on feline rehabilitation; thus, the need to identify focused studies increases to develop standardised treatment protocols. Conclusion: this paperâs focus on recent physiotherapy rehabilitation advances would help veterinary physiotherapists incorporate these methods into their practise.
| å ¨é¨æé´ | è¿å»ä¸å¹´ | è¿å»30天 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| æè¦æµè§æ¬¡æ° | 611 | 611 | 47 |
| å ¨ææµè§æ¬¡æ° | 33 | 33 | 0 |
| PDFä¸è½½æ¬¡æ° | 179 | 179 | 0 |