Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Gastric polyps in older dogs mainly in pyloric stomach area
By Taulescu, M A et al.·Published in Histology and histopathology·2014·University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Histopathological features of canine spontaneous non-neoplastic gastric polyps - a retrospective study of 15 cases.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 15 dogs with gastric polyps (growths in the stomach) were studied to understand their characteristics and potential causes. Most of these dogs were older and had polyps located mainly in the pyloric region of the stomach, with some showing signs of inflammation and infection by Helicobacter bacteria. The most common type of polyp was hyperplastic, and while there was no direct link found between the bacteria and the severity of gastritis, the presence of chronic inflammation was noted. The exact cause of these polyps remains unclear, but chronic inflammation in the stomach may play a role in their development.
People also search for: dog stomach polyp symptoms · Helicobacter infection in dogs · older dog stomach problems
Abstract
Fifteen cases of canine gastric polyps, collected over a 4-year period, were investigated using gross inspection, histological procedures and immunohistochemical techniques for Helicobacter infection. No breed or sex predisposition was found for gastric polyps, although they occurred mainly in elderly animals. There were 9 pedunculated and 6 sessile polypoid growths, between 5 to 30 mm in diameter developed mainly in the pyloric region of the stomach. The most common type of gastric polyps was the hyperplastic one. The inflammatory type was identified in three cases. Foci of AB/PAS Goblet positive cells resembling intestinal metaplasia, mild dysplasia of gastric epithelium, well delimited calcified areas, islands of osteoid matrix and nematodes were present in some of these lesions. Histological examination of the adjacent gastric polyp (surrounding gastric mucosa) revealed a severe chronic inflammation in 13 cases and a high grade of Helicobacter species colonization in all cases, but Kendall test analysis showed no correlation between Helicobacter spp. colonization degree and gastritis scores (τ = 0289; p = 0.204). A significant correlation was found between Helicobacter spp. location and gastritis scores (τ = 0.497; p = 0.035). Immunohistochemistry performed with a polyclonal antibody confirmed Helicobacter spp. infection in all cases. Based on their morphology, Helicobacter pylori - like organisms were described in 3 of 15 cases. No high degree of dysplasia nor neoplasia were identified in these lesions. The etiology and pathogenesis of gastric polyps in dogs are still unknown, although a severe chronic antral gastritis may be a predisposing condition for development of gastric polyps in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23821543/