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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with viral papilloma causing nail cyst and lameness

By Plattner, Brandon L & Hostetter, Jesse M·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2009·Department of Veterinary Pathology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cutaneous viral papilloma with local extension and subungual cyst formation in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 2-year-old female Siberian husky was brought in for lameness caused by a viral skin growth on her paw. After the initial removal of the growth, she continued to experience pain, leading to the amputation of her affected toe. Further examination revealed that the growth had extended into the nail area and formed a cyst beneath it. The dog was diagnosed with a viral papilloma and a subungual cyst, both linked to a papillomavirus infection. After treatment, the dog was expected to recover from the surgery and pain.

People also search for: dog lameness paw growth · Siberian husky toe amputation · dog viral papilloma treatment

Abstract

A viral-induced digital cutaneous exophytic papilloma was diagnosed in a 2-year-old, spayed, female Siberian husky dog with lameness. Digital pain and lameness persisted after removal of the initial papilloma, and the fifth lateral digit was subsequently amputated. Upon histologic examination of the digit, a de novo digital, cutaneous, inverted, viral papilloma and subungual cyst were diagnosed. The inverted cutaneous papilloma, located at the junction of the digital paw pad and ventral nail, extended focally through the nail into the subungual space, where an expansile cyst was formed. Cellular changes suggestive of papillomavirus infection were present in the epithelium of the original exophytic papilloma, as well as the endophytic mass and subungual cyst. Cytopathic effects included ballooning degeneration of keratinocytes, koilocytosis, irregularity of keratohyalin granules, and margination of nuclear chromatin. Numerous faintly basophilic to eosinophilic intranuclear inclusions measuring 10-15 microm in diameter were present within keratinocytes of the exophytic, endophytic, and subungual cystic lesions. Electron microscopy was performed on tissues from all lesions and revealed numerous 40-45 nm diameter hexagonal virions characteristic of papillomavirus that were arranged in crystalline arrays and dense clusters within affected nuclei.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19564510/