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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Beagle puppy with cystic thymus and blood in chest treated by surgery

By Moretti, Giulia et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2020·Department of Veterinary Medicine, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cystic thymic degeneration with pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia in a Beagle puppy: an idiopathic lesion?

Species:
dog
Breathing & coughDogs

Plain-English summary

A 6-month-old female Beagle was brought to the vet because she wasn't eating and seemed depressed. Tests showed she had a large cystic mass in her chest and fluid around her lungs, which was confirmed to be blood. The vet performed surgery to remove the abnormal tissue, which turned out to be a thymus remnant with cysts filled with blood. Thankfully, the puppy recovered well after the surgery and is doing better now.

People also search for: Beagle puppy not eating · dog chest mass surgery · puppy hemothorax treatment

Abstract

A 6-mo-old female Beagle dog was inappetent and depressed. The radiographic, ultrasonographic, and computed tomographic examination of the chest revealed a 10 × 7 cm multicystic mediastinal structure interpreted as altered thymus, in association with moderate pleural effusion that laboratory tests confirmed as hemothorax. No history of trauma or anticoagulant drug intoxication was reported, and no coagulation disorders were detected. Afterward, medial cranial sternotomy was performed to remove the altered tissue. Histologically, this tissue was compatible with a thymic remnant, characterized by numerous cystic lesions, mostly blood filled and lined by flattened-to-cuboidal epithelial cells, occasionally projecting into the surrounding stroma, and forming cytokeratin-positive ribbons, trabeculae, and papillae. Lymphocytes were scant, and numerous areas of congestion and hemorrhage were present throughout the samples. This case of idiopathic thymic hemorrhage with cystic degeneration of the thymus and pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia was an incidental finding; the dog recovered from surgery uneventfully.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32274980/