Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with neck and paw tumors causing skin tissue death
By Yasuno, Kyohei et al.·Published in The Journal of veterinary medical science·2009·Research Institute of Biosciences, Japan·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A case of canine vasotropic and vasoinvasive nonepitheliotropic lymphoma with unusual tumor cells and extensive dermal necrosis.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 14-year-old spayed female Shih Tzu was brought to the vet with masses on her neck and paw, along with severe skin damage around the tumors. The vet found that the tumors were aggressive and had invaded the surrounding tissue, causing significant necrosis (tissue death) and bleeding. After examining the cells under a microscope, the vet diagnosed her with a rare type of lymphoma (a cancer of the lymphatic system) that was particularly invasive. Unfortunately, due to the severity of the condition, treatment options may be limited, and the prognosis would depend on the extent of the disease and the dog's overall health.
People also search for: Shih Tzu skin tumors · dog lymphoma treatment · why is my dog’s skin necrotic
Abstract
A 14-year-old, spayed female Shih-tzu dog presented with masses in the dorsal aspect of cervical region and digit of the right anterior limb. Extensive necrosis was seen in the dermal tissue overlying the tumor, and diffuse round cell proliferation and infiltration were seen histologically from the superficial dermis to the deep dermis. Two types of proliferating cells were present: lymphoblast-like cells with round-oval, vesicular nuclei and moderate-large nucleoli; and smaller cells with characteristic irregularly shaped nuclei. Electron microscopy of these smaller cells showed cerebriform, pleomorphic nuclei with a chromatin pattern characteristic of lymphoid cells, as seen in lymphoblast-like tumor cells. Immunohistochemically, both types of tumor cells were positive for CD3. Most vessel walls had been invaded by tumor cells, resulting in extensive dermal necrosis and hemorrhage. Based on these histopathological findings, the tumor was diagnosed as vasotropic and vasoinvasive nonepitheliotropic lymphoma, characterized by a notable presence of unusual tumor cells with irregularly shaped nuclei and extensive dermal necrosis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19194086/