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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Two pigmented eyelid tumors in a 7-year-old Weimaraner cross dog

By Nicolize O'Dell et al.·Published in Wellcome Open Research·2024·Department of Paraclinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, Gauteng, 0110, South Africa, GB·View original on DOAJ

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Original publication title: Case Report: Cutaneous melanocytic schwannoma with concomitant melanocytoma in a canine [version 2; peer review: 1 approved, 2 approved with reservations]

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old Weimaraner cross was brought in with two pigmented growths on its eyelids. The veterinarian surgically removed the lesions, and tests showed one was a rare type of nerve sheath tumor called melanocytic schwannoma, while the other was a more common growth known as melanocytoma. The melanocytoma is usually easily treated with surgery, but the outcome for the melanocytic schwannoma is uncertain since it can behave unpredictably. The dog is being monitored for any changes after the surgery.

People also search for: dog eyelid growth · Weimaraner skin tumor · melanocytoma treatment in dogs

Abstract

Schwannoma is a nerve sheath tumour arising from differentiated Schwann cells, and melanocytic schwannoma (MS) is a rare variant where the Schwan cells produce melanin pigment. MS is typically associated with spinal nerve roots and there have been only ~20 reports of cutaneous or subcutaneous MS to-date in humans. In canines, there have only been two reports of MS, both associated with spinal root nerves. In this report, we describe a 7-year-old Weimaraner cross breed dog that presented with two pigmented lesions on the eyelids. The lesions were surgically removed and histological analysis revealed well-circumscribed, non-encapsulated, expansile, neoplasms that were displacing most of the dermis and adnexa. The first lesion was composed of spindloid cells arranged in short interlacing streams with large amounts of pale eosinophilic cytoplasm that sometimes contained fine melanin granules. In areas there were spindle cells arranged in verocay bodies which led to a diagnosis of MS. In contrast, the second lesion was composed of polygonal cells arranged in thick sheets with large amounts of pale eosinophilic cytoplasm that sometimes contained fine melanin granules. The diagnosis was melanocytoma (which is one of the macroscopic differential diagnoses for MS). Whilst melanocytoma is a commonly occurring cutaneous lesion in canines and surgical removal is considered curative, due to little being known about MS in dogs, the outcome remained guarded, as MS in humans has an unpredictable nature, and recurrence and metastasis have been reported.

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Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.12688/wellcomeopenres.19694.2