Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with thyroid cancer had severe neck bleeding and shock treatment
By Slensky, Kimberly A et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2003·Department of Clinical Studies-Philadelphia, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Acute severe hemorrhage secondary to arterial invasion in a dog with thyroid carcinoma.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 7-year-old spayed female Labrador Retriever was brought in with severe swelling and bruising on her neck, difficulty breathing, and signs of shock due to heavy bleeding. After emergency treatment with fluids and blood products, scans revealed a large mass in her neck and significant internal bleeding. Surgeons found and removed a tumor attached to a major artery, which was diagnosed as thyroid cancer. Following surgery, the dog received radiation and chemotherapy, and thirteen months later, she showed no signs of the disease and was doing well.
People also search for: Labrador neck swelling · dog thyroid cancer treatment · dog hemothorax recovery · dog surgery for neck tumor
Abstract
A 7-year-old spayed female Labrador Retriever was referred because of progressive swelling and bruising of the neck, hemothorax, a possible mediastinal mass, and stridor. At the time of admission, the dog was recumbent, mentally dull, tachycardic, and hypothermic. Fluid therapy with hydroxyethyl starch and a balanced electrolyte solution was administered because of presumed hypovolemic shock secondary to hemorrhage; multiple units of packed RBCs and fresh frozen plasma were also administered. On the basis of the computed tomographic images, extensive subcutaneous, subfascial, and cranial mediastinal hemorrhage; hemothorax; prescapular lymphadenopathy; and a contrast-enhancing mass in the left cranioventral aspect of the neck were diagnosed. Exploratory surgery of the neck was performed. All subcutaneous structures were encased in a large blood clot. During dissection of the clot, pulsatile bleeding was observed just caudal to and to the left of the larynx; ligation of the left common carotid artery resulted in immediate cessation of the pulsatile bleeding. Further surgical exploration revealed a 2.5 x 2.5-cm mass adhered to the left common carotid artery at the level of the branching to the left cranial thyroid artery. The mass was removed; the histologic diagnosis was thyroid carcinoma. Three weeks after surgery, treatment with a combination of radiation and chemotherapy (doxorubicin and carboplatin) was begun. Thirteen months after surgery, the dog continued to be free from clinical signs of disease.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12959383/