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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Salivary mucocele causing neck swelling in 13 dogs and ultrasound

By Torad, Faisal A & Hassan, Elham A·Published in Veterinary radiology & ultrasound : the official journal of the American College of Veterinary Radiology and the International Veterinary Radiology Association·2013·Department of Surgery·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical and ultrasonographic characteristics of salivary mucoceles in 13 dogs.

Species:
dog
Breathing & coughDogs

Plain-English summary

A dog with a swollen neck was diagnosed with a salivary mucocele, which is a buildup of saliva that leaks from a damaged salivary gland. In a group of 13 dogs, the swelling's appearance changed over time; for example, those with recent symptoms had a round shape with clear fluid, while older cases showed a more grainy texture. Diagnosis was confirmed through a needle sample and surgery for some dogs. The study highlighted how the ultrasound images of these mucoceles can look different depending on how long the dog has had the problem.

People also search for: dog neck swelling · salivary mucocele treatment · dog swollen gland symptoms

Abstract

Salivary mucocele is one of the causes of submandibular swelling in dogs and is due to a collection of mucoid saliva that has leaked from a damaged salivary gland. The purpose of this case series report was to describe the clinical and ultrasonographic characteristics of confirmed salivary mucoceles in 13 dogs admitted to the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine at Cairo University. The final diagnosis of salivary mucocele was based on aspirate cytology for all dogs and additional surgical excision for seven dogs. For dogs admitted from 2 weeks to 1 month from the onset of clinical signs, the cervical mucocele appeared as a round echogenic structure with a large volume of central anechoic content. The wall was a clearly identified hyperechoic structure surrounding the gland. For dogs admitted between 1 to 2 months from the onset of clinical signs, the volume of anechoic material appeared less than that seen in the acute cases. The overall appearance of the salivary mucocele was heterogenous. For dogs admitted after 2 months from the onset of clinical signs, the salivary mucocele appeared grainy or mottled, with a heterogenous appearance and a further decrease in anechoic content. For one dog that presented after 3 months from the onset of clinical signs, the salivary mucocele was hard on palpation and appeared hyperechoic with distal acoustic shadowing. Findings from this study indicated that ultrasonographic characteristics of salivary mucoceles in dogs vary depending on the chronological stage of the disease.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23442204/