Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with large raised scar on hind foot after ulcer treatment
By Avallone, Giancarlo et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2011·Dipartimento di Patologia Animale, Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Hypertrophic scar in a dog: histological and clinical features.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A male bullmastiff was treated for weakness in his back legs and coordination issues caused by a spinal infection and disc herniation. During treatment, he developed a large, non-healing mass between the pads of his left hindfoot. After surgery to remove the mass, it was diagnosed as a hypertrophic scar, which is a type of thickened scar tissue. Although an injection of corticosteroids helped reduce the mass, it came back after a few months, likely due to the dog injuring the area by licking it. This case highlights that hypertrophic scars can occur in dogs and may need careful management.
People also search for: dog hind leg weakness · bullmastiff foot mass treatment · dog scar tissue management
Abstract
An adult male bullmastiff dog was treated for paraparesis and ataxia due to discospondylitis and disc herniation. At this time, the dog had a nonhealing ulcer between the pads of the left hindfoot. At re-evaluation, the dog had developed a large exophitic mass in the previously ulcerated area. Cytological examination revealed occasional spindle cells with mild atypia, and a soft tissue tumour was suspected. The mass was excised and submitted for histology. The lesion was characterized by superficial ulceration, an intermediate layer of granulation tissue and a deep portion containing vertically orientated capillaries and perpendicularly arranged fibroblasts and collagen. The histological features led to a diagnosis of hypertrophic scar. Eight weeks after surgery, the lesion recurred and was treated with an intralesional injection of methylprednisolone acetate. The lesion regressed in 10 days, but recurred after 3 months following severe self-trauma. Hypertrophic scars and keloids are two types of exuberant scarring reported in human beings, the pathogenesis of which is still unclear but seems to involve several cytokines, growth factors and inflammatory cells. The histological features identified in this case paralleled those reported in hypertrophic scars in humans. In this case, intralesional corticosteroid therapy was useful in the management of the lesion, but the severe self-trauma could have influenced the recurrence. Even if uncommon, hypertrophic scar should be included among the differential diagnoses of spindle cell tumours in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21392138/