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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cancer tumor in the lower esophagus of a yellow-naped parrot

By Hines, Elizabeth S. et al.·Published in Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation·2024·Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA, United States·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Adenocarcinoma of the distal esophagus and esophageal-proventricular junction in a yellow-naped parrot

Species:
bird

Plain-English summary

A 57-year-old male yellow-naped parrot was brought to the vet because he was lethargic, not eating, and losing weight. Tests showed no immediate issues, but imaging revealed a mass in his esophagus that was blocking food passage. Unfortunately, despite attempts to feed him, he passed away shortly after. An autopsy revealed that the mass was an adenocarcinoma, a type of cancer that had spread deeply into the esophagus, which is quite rare in parrots.

People also search for: yellow-naped parrot cancer symptoms · lethargy in parrots · parrot weight loss causes

Abstract

A 57-y-old male yellow-naped parrot ( Amazona auropalliata) was presented because of lethargy, inappetence, and weight loss. Hematology and serum biochemistry were unremarkable, and imaging revealed a mass in the distal esophagus at the coelomic inlet. The luminal diameter of the esophagus was reduced in this area, and passage of ingesta was limited. Following gavage feeding, the patient died and was submitted for autopsy. At postmortem examination, the noted mass effect was a thickening of the distal esophagus with adherent, coalescing, soft, pale-tan plaques on the mucosal surface. Additional gross findings included pale-tan, opaque feed material oozing from the dorsum of the lungs and covering the cranial air sacs. Histology of the esophagus, esophageal-proventricular junction, and proximal proventriculus revealed an unencapsulated, infiltrative, transmural neoplasm that extended from the mucosal surface deep into the muscularis, almost to the adventitia. The neoplasm was composed of cuboidal cells arranged in islands and tubules, consistent with an adenocarcinoma, a rarely reported entity in the esophagus of psittacine birds and to our knowledge not reported previously at the esophageal-proventricular junction.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1177/10406387241247282