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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with rare heart tumor causing vein blockage and heart failure

By R. Baisan et al.·Published in BMC Veterinary Research·2018·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: A rare case of intracardiac fibrosarcoma with myxoid features inducing venous occlusion in a dog – a case report

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old male mix breed Husky was brought to the vet because he was losing weight, not eating, and having trouble exercising. He also showed signs of breathlessness and had a swollen abdomen. Unfortunately, he passed away shortly after the examination, and a necropsy revealed a mass in his heart that was blocking blood flow, diagnosed as cardiac fibrosarcoma, a rare type of heart tumor. This case highlights the importance of considering heart tumors when a dog has symptoms of heart failure.

People also search for: dog heart tumor symptoms · Husky weight loss and breathlessness · cardiac fibrosarcoma in dogs

Abstract

BackgroundIn both humans and animals, cardiac fibrosarcoma is rare among primary cardiac malignant neoplasia. The overall prevalence of cardiac neoplasia in dogs is low, reported to be between 0.17% and 0.19% of hospital admissions. The aim of this report is to describe the clinical and pathological findings of a dog presenting signs of right sided congestive heart failure due to an intracardiac and venous obstructing mass, diagnosed by histopathology as cardiac fibrosarcoma with myxoid features.Case presentationA 7 years old male mix breed Husky weighing 23 kg was presented to our Veterinary Teaching Hospital the owner reporting weight loss, inappetence and exercise intolerance and on presentation exhibited breathlessness and an enlarged abdomen. A 5 minutes six leads electrocardiogram and cardiac ultrasonography were performed using standard, established techniques. Complete blood count, serum liver enzyme activities and renal parameters were assessed. Shortly after the cardiologic examination, the dog died and necropsy examination of the cardiovascular system revealed an elongated and branched mass attached dorsally to the endocardial insertion of the septal tricuspid valve leaflet. This mass extended retrogradely into the lumen of the cervical veins, obstructing the venous flow. Histological diagnosis of the mass was cardiac fibrosarcoma with myxoid features. Multiple metastases were found inside the lungs only.ConclusionThis is the first report describing a right cardiac fibrosarcoma with myxoid features and venous obstruction in a dog. Cardiac fibrosarcoma is a rare finding, however should be considered when an intracardiac mass is diagnosed.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/30547774