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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Frontal bone cancer tumor in a 12-year-old cat

By Yildiz, F et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary science·2003·Department of Pathology·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Frontal chondrosarcoma in a cat.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 12-year-old female cross-bred cat was diagnosed with a chondrosarcoma, a type of bone cancer, on her forehead. After surgery to remove the tumor, the cat experienced a recurrence of the cancer at the same site just two months later. This case highlights the aggressive nature of this type of tumor and the challenges in treating it effectively. Pet owners should be aware that some tumors can come back quickly even after surgery.

People also search for: cat forehead tumor · chondrosarcoma in cats · cat cancer treatment options

Abstract

In this case, chondrosarcoma, detected on the frontal bone of a 12-year-old female cross-bred cat was examined clinically and histopathologically. After being processed routinely, specimens were stained with Hematoxylin & Eosin and Crossman Modification of Mallars Triple Stain. The neoplasm was composed of numerous fusiform mesenchymal cells intimately associated with the formation of lobular structure, separated by thin fibrous septae. In the center there were observed atypical chondrocytes, forming the matrix of the tumoral mass, surrounded by round-ovoid, fusiform mesenchymal cells having interference with the septal tissue at the periphery. Few mitotic figures were detected in these areas. The tumors pattern, localization, the species and the age of the animal were consistent with those of multilobular chondroma known as chondroma rodens. Although the mitotic figures and the wide atypia indicated that the entity was a neoplasm of malign type, it was more likely considered to be the malign transformation of chondroma rodens. The post-surgical outcome of the patient was observed, and recurrence on the same site was reported within 2 months.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14610375/