Unfortunately the report is in medical-speak rather than an explanation that most dog owners can grasp. Did the vet give you any idea of what this translates to? Tendinosis is chronic inflammation vs tendonitis is like a sudden tear, if I'm remembering correctly in my horse background. The other thing that was generally followed was months to heal regarding letters in the name: bone 4 months, tendon 6 months, suspensory 10 months (we said "looks like a year off"). But that was 20+ years ago and it was horses in race training, so lots of different factors...
The "cleaning out" the surgeon mentioned might be referring to irritating the tissue to activate healing. Not unheard of, if that's what he's referring to. I'd need him to talk to me in easy-to-understand language preferably with diagrams and a pointer if it was my dog.
My friends Dutch Shepherd had a sever lameness at about 1 - 2 years old and the vet used something called a Class 4 Cold Laser - non-invasive, she would go to the clinic, lay on a pad on the floor in the exam room and a vet tech would rub this wand/light over and around her shoulder for maybe 10 minutes? Once or twice a week for a month or two? Sorry, wasn't my dog and it was a long time ago and I don't remember what the diagnosis was to begin with but long story short, it did work. She was also on restricted exercise during that time, but she was training in beginner Rally, which is on leash small movements in obedience, no running, or jumping or even trotting. So that kept her mind busy. This dog went has been physically active ever since including many fast cats and now going on 12 years old.
Here's some info on the cold laser if you think it would apply to you. If you wanted to ask the vet about it as an option or get a second opinion and bring it up with the next vet, it would be better if you understood how it works so they could say why or why not it would be worth trying. If it was needed long term, you can buy the machines and do it yourself, it's not woo-woo, they use these on humans too.
Relief Without the Waitlist Cold Laser Therapy for Dogs: Pain Relief and Healing 👉Help your dog feel better todayGet a quick read on whether red light therapy is a fit for your dog Reviewed: [March 2026]Updated: [March 2026] Cold laser therapy for dogs is a non-invasive way to reduce pain and...
medcovet.com
Wondering if
@Ddski5 would have input since he works with human injuries I think?
Do you have a video of your dog limping? Is it all the time every day or is it mild and intermittent? Since you first posted in January has it gotten worse or just staying about the same?
Wishing you the best -