Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Fish skin grafts help heal dog wounds after tumor surgery
By Naghi, Rachel et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2023·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Acellular fish skin may be used to facilitate wound healing following wide surgical tumor excision in dogs: a prospective case series.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of five dogs with skin tumors on their legs underwent surgery to remove the tumors, which included three mast cell tumors and two soft tissue sarcomas. After the tumors were excised, the veterinarians applied acellular fish skin grafts to help the wounds heal. Most of the dogs healed completely within 7 to 15 weeks, depending on whether they experienced any complications. There were no negative side effects from the fish skin grafts, and none of the dogs had any tumor recurrence during the follow-up period.
People also search for: dog skin tumor treatment · fish skin grafts for dogs · mast cell tumor surgery recovery · dog wound healing time
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To prospectively evaluate clinical outcomes using acellular fish skin grafts (FSGs) for the management of complete wound healing by secondary intention after wide surgical excision of skin tumors in dogs. ANIMALS: 5 dogs undergoing wide surgical excision of skin tumors on the distal extremity. CLINICAL PRESENTATION AND PROCEDURES: FSGs were applied to surgical wound beds following wide excision of the tumor. Bandages were changed weekly and additional grafts placed when integration of the previous graft was complete. The wounds were assessed for the following: dimensions, tissue health (color), time to complete epithelialization, complications, and tumor recurrence. RESULTS: All masses were excised with 2-cm lateral margins and 1 fascial plane deep to the tumor. Tumor diagnoses included 3 mast cell tumors and 2 soft tissue sarcomas. Surgical wounds had a median area of 27.6 cm2 (range, 17.6 to 58.7 cm2). The median number of FSG applications was 5 (range, 4 to 9 applications). Complete epithelialization occurred within 7 to 9 weeks for uncomplicated wounds (3 of 5) and 12 to 15 weeks for complicated wounds (2 of 5) that sustained self-trauma. There were no adverse events related to the use of FSGs. Local recurrence was not seen over a follow-up period ranging from 239 to 856 days. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Wide surgical excision of distal extremity skin tumors, followed by repeated application of acellular FSGs, resulted in complete healing of all wounds with no adverse events. This treatment method does not require advanced reconstructive surgical skills and may be useful for the management of skin tumors on the distal extremities.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37315939/