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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with chronic vomiting diagnosed with stomach sarcoma

By Romanucci, Mariarita et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2021·Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Hypertrophic gastropathy associated with gastric sarcoma in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 14-year-old spayed female Labrador Retriever was brought to the vet due to chronic vomiting that had lasted for eight months. After an ultrasound and endoscopy, the vet found a mass in her stomach, which turned out to be a type of cancer called gastric sarcoma. The dog underwent surgery to remove part of her stomach, and the examination of the tissue confirmed the diagnosis. While this type of cancer is rare, the surgery aimed to improve her quality of life, and the outcome will depend on her recovery and any further treatment needed.

People also search for: dog chronic vomiting treatment · Labrador Retriever stomach cancer · gastric sarcoma in dogs

Abstract

A 14-y-old spayed female Labrador Retriever was presented with an 8-mo history of chronic vomiting. Abdominal ultrasound and gastrointestinal endoscopy revealed a mass protruding into the gastric lumen, with cytologic features suggestive of sarcoma. A partial gastrectomy was performed; the gastric body and antrum were thickened, with a cerebriform appearance of the mucosal surface. Histologic examination revealed a submucosal neoplastic proliferation of fusiform cells variably arranged in irregular bundles and scattered whorls. Fusiform cells strongly reacted to antibodies against vimentin, S100, and neuron-specific enolase; glial fibrillary acidic protein was moderately and multifocally expressed. Pancytokeratin, KIT, α-smooth muscle actin, and desmin were nonreactive. Histologic and immunohistochemical findings suggested a diagnosis of gastric sarcoma with features referable to a non-GIST (gastrointestinal stromal tumor), non-smooth muscle NIMT (non-angiogenic, non-lymphogenic intestinal mesenchymal tumor). The overlying gastric mucosa was thickened by elongated and dilated gastric glands, predominantly lined by intensely periodic acid-Schiff-stained mucous cells. This altered mucosal architecture was suggestive of Ménétrier-like disease. Although this disease has been hypothesized to predispose to gastric adenocarcinoma in dogs, an association with gastric sarcoma has not been documented previously in the veterinary literature, to our knowledge.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33090082/