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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Nasal growths causing bleeding and sneezing in dogs explained

By Forster, Ashley et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2025·University of Pennsylvania, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical and histological characterization of 19 chondro-osseous respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartomas and 2 respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartomas in dogs.

Species:
dog
Dog coughingBreathing & coughDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 21 dogs with nasal masses were diagnosed with a type of growth called respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartomas, which can cause symptoms like nosebleeds, sneezing, and difficulty breathing. Many of these dogs showed signs of chronic inflammation and had additional issues like tissue growths and polyps. Treatment varied, but some dogs improved after receiving radiotherapy or radiofrequency procedures. Unfortunately, many continued to have respiratory problems, and the average survival time after diagnosis was about 9 months, with some dogs needing to be euthanized due to their condition.

People also search for: dog nosebleeds treatment · sneezing dog nasal mass · respiratory problems in dogs · dog nasal tumor symptoms · dog radiotherapy for nasal growths

Abstract

Nasal biopsies from 21 dogs diagnosed with chondro-osseous respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartomas or respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartomas were reviewed. Associated lesions included angiomatous tissue (4/21), seromucinous gland proliferation (2/21), and polyps (3/21), and all had chronic inflammation. Dogs had epistaxis (14/21), sneezing (9/21), decreased airflow (8/21), congestion (6/21), and discharge (5/21). In addition to a mass lesion, computed tomography findings (= 19) included turbinate lysis (10/19), cribriform plate and orbit erosion (4/19), and contralateral extension (8/19). In 16 dogs with outcome data collected 0-49 months after diagnosis, 13 had continued respiratory symptoms, 11 of which received medical management; 2 of the 3 dogs with improvement had radiotherapy/radiofrequency procedures after biopsy. Eight dogs were alive, 5 were euthanized due to the hamartoma (median survival 9.3 months), 2 died from unknown causes, and 1 died from a seizure. Nasal hamartomas are often locally destructive mass lesions that cause recurrent upper respiratory symptoms and may require more aggressive therapeutic interventions for disease control. Diagnosing nasal hamartomas requires integrating the clinical history, imaging results, adequate biopsy sampling of the mass, and the presence of characteristic histologic features.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40574347/