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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with large chest tumor treated by titanium mesh chest wall repair

By Jung WJ et al.·2024·Department of Veterinary Surgery, South Korea·View original on Europe PMC

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Original publication title: Chest Wall Reconstruction Using Titanium Mesh in a Dog with Huge Thoracic Extraskeletal Osteosarcoma.

Species:
dog
OsteosarcomaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A 6-year-old mixed breed dog was brought in with a large mass on the right side of its chest that had grown quickly over two weeks. The dog was having trouble breathing, and tests revealed fluid in the chest, which was not cancerous. The vet performed surgery to remove the mass along with several ribs and used a special titanium mesh to reconstruct the chest wall. After the surgery, the dog recovered well and showed no signs of cancer returning during follow-up scans eight months later.

People also search for: dog chest mass treatment · dog breathing problems · titanium mesh surgery for dogs · extraskeletal osteosarcoma in dogs · dog rib removal recovery

Abstract

A 6-year-old castrated male mixed dog presented with a rapidly growing mass at the right chest wall two weeks after initial detection. A mesenchymal origin of the malignancy was suspected based on fine-needle aspiration. Computed tomography (CT) revealed that the mass originated from the right chest wall and protruded externally (6.74 × 5.51 × 4.13 cm<sup>3</sup>) and internally (1.82 × 1.69 × 1.50 cm<sup>3</sup>). The patient revisited the hospital because of breathing difficulties. Radiography confirmed pleural effusion, and ultrasonography-guided thoracocentesis was performed. The effusion was hemorrhagic, and microscopic evaluation showed no malignant cells. Before surgery, CT without anesthesia was performed to evaluate the status of the patient. The 7-10th ribs were en bloc resected at a 3-cm margin dorsally and ventrally, and two ribs cranially and caudally from the mass. After recovering the collapsed right middle lobe of the lung due to compression from the internal mass with positive-pressure ventilation, a 3D-printed bone model contoured titanium mesh was tied to each covering rib and surrounding muscles using 2-0 blue nylon and closed routinely. The thoracic cavity was successfully reconstructed, and no flail chest was observed. The patient was histo-pathologically diagnosed with extraskeletal osteosarcoma. A CT scan performed 8 months after surgery showed no evident recurrence, metastasis, or implant failure. This is the first case report of chest wall reconstruction using titanium mesh in a dog. The use of a titanium mesh allows for the reconstruction of extensive chest wall defects, regardless of location, without major postoperative complications.

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Original publication on Europe PMC: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/39335226