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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Reddish-purple skin lesions in a young dog diagnosed as angiomatosis

By Kim, Y et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2005·National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cutaneous angiomatosis in a young dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 1-year-old spayed female mixed-breed dog had two reddish-purple skin lumps, one on her right front leg and another on her shoulder. The first lump had been noticed since she was adopted at 6 months old and grew larger over 11 weeks. A skin biopsy showed that the lumps were made up of small blood vessels, which looked concerning but were ultimately found to be benign. After 6 years of monitoring, the dog has not shown any signs of the lumps getting worse or causing problems.

People also search for: dog skin lumps · reddish-purple skin lesions in dogs · hemangiosarcoma in dogs · benign skin tumors in dogs

Abstract

A 1-year-old, spayed, female, mixed-breed dog had two reddish-purple cutaneous lesions, one on the right dorsal antebrachium and the other on the right shoulder. The lesions consisted of approximately 13 x 3 cm and 15 x 10 cm, irregular, patchy regions of 0.5-3.0 cm, circular, sometimes raised, reddish-purple swellings resembling ecchymoses. The lesion on the antebrachium had been noticed since the dog was adopted at 6 months of age and appeared to have increased in size over an 11-week period, at which time skin punch biopsy revealed an infiltrative pattern of well-differentiated blood vessels leading to an interpretation that the lesion was a well-differentiated hemangiosarcoma. The second lesion was revealed when the dog had its fur shaved in that area during surgical preparation to excise the antebrachial lesion. No other skin lesions were found on the dog. Microscopically, there was a widely disseminated and infiltrative-like pattern of benign-appearing small blood vessels, which were throughout the superficial and deep dermis and subcutis. Although the disseminated nature suggested malignancy, the histologic appearance of well-differentiated small blood vessels and nonprogressive clinical features indicate that the lesions were benign. The dog has been followed for 6 years and to date has no evidence of progression of the antebrachial lesion or shoulder lesion. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first report of a congenital angiomatosis-like lesion in a young dog, with extensive involvement of the forelimb.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15872389/