Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Bone marrow necrosis and myelophthisis: manifestations of T-cell lymphoma in a horse.
- Journal:
- Veterinary clinical pathology
- Year:
- 2008
- Authors:
- Kelton, Danielle R et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences · United States
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A 14-year-old spayed American Paint mare was taken to the vet because she was experiencing mild belly pain, not eating, a fever, and low blood cell counts. During the examination, the vet noticed her heart was racing, she was breathing quickly, and her gums were pale. Blood tests showed worsening low blood cell counts and some unusual cells were found in her blood. Despite treatment with antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs, and steroids, her condition did not improve, and she developed bleeding spots on her skin and nose. Sadly, she was humanely put to sleep, and a postmortem exam revealed that she had a type of cancer called T-cell lymphoma, which had severely damaged her bone marrow. This case is notable because it's the first time bone marrow necrosis (death of bone marrow tissue) due to lymphoma has been reported in a horse.
Abstract
A 14-year-old spayed American Paint mare was evaluated for mild colic, anorexia, pyrexia, and pancytopenia. Physical examination revealed mild tachycardia, tachypnea, and pale mucous membranes. Serial laboratory analyses revealed progressive pancytopenia, hyperfibrinogenemia, and hyperglobulinemia. A few large atypical cells were observed in peripheral blood smears. Results of tests for equine infectious anemia and antipenicillin antibody were negative. Serum protein electrophoresis indicated a polyclonal gammopathy. Smears of bone marrow aspirates contained hypercellular particles, but cell lines could not be identified because the cells were karyolytic, with pale basophilic smudged nuclei and lack of cellular detail. A diagnosis of bone marrow necrosis was made. Treatment consisted of antimicrobials, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and corticosteroids. The pyrexia resolved; however, the pancytopenia progressively worsened and petechiation and epistaxis developed. The horse was humanely euthanized. Postmortem examination revealed a diffuse round cell neoplasm infiltrating the kidneys, spleen, lymph nodes, lungs, and bone marrow. Immunophenotyping results (CD3+, CD79alpha-) indicated the neoplastic cells were of T-cell lineage. Infiltration of lymphoma cells into the bone marrow appeared to have resulted in severe myelophthisis and bone marrow necrosis. Bone marrow necrosis has been associated previously with lymphoma in humans and dogs. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of lymphoma resulting in bone marrow necrosis in a horse.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19055575/