Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Ferret with right leg pain diagnosed with femur lymphoma
By Eshar, David et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2010·View original on Crossref →
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Original publication title: Diagnosis and treatment of myelo-osteolytic plasmablastic lymphoma of the femur in a domestic ferret
- Species:
- rodent
Plain-English summary
A 6-year-old female ferret was brought in because she had been less active for a month and was limping on her right back leg. After examining her, the vet found pain in her right femur and discovered that she had a type of cancer called lymphoma. To treat her, the vet performed a surgery to remove her right hind leg and started her on chemotherapy. Six months later, follow-up tests showed no signs of cancer returning, and the ferret was doing well after the surgery and treatment.
People also search for: ferret limping · ferret cancer treatment · lymphoma in ferrets · ferret amputation recovery · ferret chemotherapy side effects
Abstract
Abstract Case Description—A 6-year-old 0.82-kg (1.8-lb) spayed female domestic ferret was evaluated because of a 1-month history of decreased activity that had progressively worsened over the past week. The ferret had previously been determined to have adrenocortical disease and was undergoing medical management for the associated clinical signs. Clinical Findings—Physical examination revealed lameness of the right hind limb with evidence of pain elicited during palpation of the right femur. Results of a CBC suggested mild anemia, and those of a serum biochemical analysis indicated a high blood glucose concentration. Radiography of the limb revealed extensive lysis of the right femur. Cytologic evaluation of a fine-needle aspirate of the bone lesion revealed a dominant plasma cell component. Plasma cell neoplasia was suspected on the basis of these findings. Treatment and Outcome—Radical right hind limb amputation with mid to caudal hemipelvectomy was performed. Histologic evaluation of the lesion allowed a diagnosis of lymphoma with plasmablastic features, and immunohistochemical testing revealed a few CD79α-postive neoplastic cells and rare BLA36-positive cells. Adjunctive antineoplastic treatment with systemically administered multidrug chemotherapy was initiated. Six months after surgery, the ferret was reevaluated, and chemotherapy was discontinued when results of clinicopathologic tests, whole body survey radiography, and abdominal ultrasonography suggested no recurrence of the disease. Clinical Relevance—The ferret appeared to cope well with radical hind limb amputation, and the chemotherapeutic protocol used was easy to administer. This treatment approach might lead to better owner and patient compliance in other cases of lymphoma in ferrets.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.2460/javma.237.4.407