Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
All lesions great and small, part 1: diagnostic cytology in veterinary medicine.
- Journal:
- Diagnostic cytopathology
- Year:
- 2014
- Authors:
- Sharkey, Leslie C et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Plain-English summary
This article discusses a method called cytopathology, which is a quick and cost-effective way to examine samples from animals to diagnose various conditions. Veterinarians often take samples from the skin and other tissues to check for problems like infections or tumors, and these samples can be analyzed using special stains and techniques. The review focuses on common pets like dogs, cats, and horses, looking at issues related to their skin, muscles, and lymph nodes. It aims to help those in human medicine understand how similar conditions appear in animals, although it doesn't cover every possible issue. Overall, the article highlights the importance of understanding the unique health challenges faced by different animal species.
Abstract
Cytopathology is a minimally invasive, rapid, and cost-effective diagnostic modality with broad utilization in veterinary medicine. Primary care clinicians often screen common cutaneous and subcutaneous aspirates, with other samples most frequently evaluated by board certified veterinary clinical pathologists in reference laboratories. Wright-Giemsa stains are frequently utilized with the application of ancillary diagnostics such as cytochemistry, immunocytochemistry, flow cytometry, and molecular diagnostic techniques complicated by the need to develop and validate species specific reagents and protocols. The interpretation of veterinary cytology samples must be undertaken with extensive knowledge of the breadth of animal species, which includes familiarity with the frequency and biological behavior of inflammatory, infectious, and neoplastic lesions that are influenced by species, breed, and husbandry conditions. This review is the first of two parts that focus on the most common domestic companion animal species (dog, cat, and horse), taking an organ system approach to survey important lesions that may be unique to veterinary species or have interesting correlates in human medicine. The first of the two-part series covers skin and subcutaneous tissue, the musculoskeletal system, and lymphoid organs. The cytologic features and biological behavior of similar lesions are compared, and selected molecular mechanisms of disease and ancillary diagnostics are reviewed when characterized. Supporting figures illustrate a subset of lesions. While not a comprehensive catalog of veterinary cytology, the goal is to give cytopathologists working in human medicine a general impression of correlates in veterinary practice.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24554514/