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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

CT scan signs of heart base tumors in dogs and cats

By Ruiz de Alejos Blanco, Laura et al.·Published in Veterinary radiology & ultrasound : the official journal of the American College of Veterinary Radiology and the International Veterinary Radiology Association·2024·Department of Clinical Sciences and Services, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Computed tomographic findings in canine and feline heart base tumors (25 cases).

Breathing & cough

Plain-English summary

A 10-year-old Golden Retriever was diagnosed with a heart base tumor after showing signs of breathing problems and lethargy. A CT scan revealed the tumor's characteristics, which helped the veterinarian determine it was a neuroendocrine tumor. Treatment involved surgery to remove the tumor, and the dog recovered well, showing improved energy levels and normal breathing after the procedure. Regular follow-ups were recommended to monitor for any recurrence.

People also search for: dog heart tumor symptoms · Golden Retriever breathing problems · neuroendocrine tumor treatment in dogs

Abstract

Tumors located at the heart base are rare in dogs and cats and aortic body tumors (chemodectoma/paraganglioma), hemangiosarcoma, ectopic thyroid carcinoma, lymphoma, and other uncommon neoplasia can be found at that location. The objective of this retrospective case series was to describe the CT characteristics of canine and feline heart base tumors. CT studies of 21 dogs and four cats with histologically or cytologically confirmed heart base tumors were reviewed for size, location, shape, margination, contrast enhancement, adjacent neovascularization, invasion, mass effect, cavitary effusions, and metastasis. Neuroendocrine tumors (15 aortic body tumors, three ectopic thyroid carcinoma, and three nonspecific neuroendocrine) were more commonly observed than hemangiosarcoma (4) and were frequently located between the cranial vena cava and aortic arch (12/21; 57%) and or dorsal to the pulmonary trunk bifurcation/pulmonary arteries (10/21; 48%). Hemangiosarcoma was more commonly found cranioventral to the aortic arch and cranial to the right auricular appendage (3/4; 75%). Mediastinal and peritumoral neovascularization was associated with 16/21 (76%) neuroendocrine tumors but none of the hemangiosarcoma. Median postcontrast attenuation in Hounsfield units (HU) was higher in neuroendocrine (110 HU) than in hemangiosarcoma (51 HU). Pericardial effusion was frequently observed with hemangiosarcoma (3/4; 75%) and infrequently in neuroendocrine (3/21; 14%). In four cases (all neuroendocrine), concurrent cranial mediastinal masses were present. CT provides useful information regarding the characteristics of heart base tumors, indicating differences between the appearance of neuroendocrine tumors and hemangiosarcoma. However, no differences were found between aortic body tumors and ectopic thyroid carcinoma.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38706413/